Pseudonymising Beneficial-Owner Disclosures for AML Compliance Review – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per Bribery Act 2010
Beneficial-owner disclosure documents — prepared for anti-money-laundering (AML) due diligence and adequate-procedures compliance under the Bribery Act 2010 — identify natural persons who ultimately own or control a corporate structure, including their names, nationalities, and ownership percentages. anonym.legal pseudonymises those individuals so that compliance advisers can assess the adequacy of the disclosure framework and ownership-tracing methodology without direct access to the named individuals' personal data.
When this applies
This task applies when beneficial-owner disclosure documents are reviewed by AML compliance consultants, legal advisers, or internal audit teams assessing the robustness of the entity's adequate-procedures framework, and those reviewers require sight of the disclosure structure and methodology rather than the individuals' identities.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the beneficial-owner disclosure document or UBO register extract.
- The engine identifies named beneficial owners, their nationalities, dates of birth, and addresses.
- Each individual is pseudonymised consistently; ownership percentages, control thresholds, and the tracing methodology are preserved.
- A mapping table is produced with UK/EU data residency.
- Release the pseudonymised version for compliance review; restore originals before submission to any regulatory body or counterparty.
What you provide
- Beneficial-owner disclosure document or UBO register extract
- Corporate structure chart showing ownership chain (if separate)
- Any certification or declaration signed by named beneficial owners
Limitations & cautions
- Beneficial-owner information submitted to regulatory bodies, counterparties, or financial institutions must contain the real identities of the beneficial owners — the pseudonymised version is for internal compliance review only.
- The Bribery Act 2010 adequate-procedures assessment requires specialist legal and compliance advice; pseudonymisation of the disclosure document does not itself constitute compliance.
- The tool pseudonymises personal data in the disclosure but does not verify the accuracy or completeness of the underlying beneficial-ownership information.
FAQ
Can I share a pseudonymised UBO disclosure with an overseas correspondent bank?
No. Correspondent banks require the actual identities of beneficial owners for their own AML obligations. Share the re-identified version for formal AML submissions.
How does the tool handle complex multi-tier ownership structures?
The engine processes all individuals named in the ownership chain, regardless of the number of tiers. Each natural person receives a unique pseudonym; the ownership percentages and structural relationships between entities are preserved.
Is this tool suitable for use in the context of sanctions screening?
Sanctions screening must be conducted against the real identities of beneficial owners, not pseudonymised versions. Use this tool only for the internal review of disclosure methodology, not for sanctions checks.
Does the Bribery Act 2010 require beneficial-owner disclosures to be retained?
The Bribery Act 2010 requires adequate procedures but does not itself mandate a specific retention period for UBO disclosures. Retention requirements may arise under anti-money-laundering regulations — obtain specialist compliance advice.