FinCEN Anti-Money Laundering Real Estate Reporting Rule Now in Effect
The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has officially implemented its long-anticipated Residential Real Estate Reporting Rule, marking a significant expansion of anti-money laundering (AML) requirements in the real estate sector.
Effective March 1, 2026, the rule introduces a nationwide reporting regime targeting certain high-risk real estate transactions—particularly those historically used to obscure beneficial ownership and facilitate illicit financial activity.
Key Highlights
1. Scope of Covered Transactions. The rule applies to non-financed (all-cash or privately financed) transfers of U.S. residential real estate where the buyer is a legal entity or trust.
- Includes LLCs, corporations, partnerships, and trusts.
- Covers residential properties such as 1-4 family homes, condos, co-ops, and certain vacant land.
- No minimum purchase threshold applies.
2. Reporting Obligations. Designated “reporting persons” (e.g., settlement agents, title companies, attorneys) must file a Real Estate Report with FinCEN.
- Reports must disclose beneficial ownership information.
- Filing deadline: generally, within 30 days of closing.
3. Focus on Transparency. The rule specifically targets transactions that bypass traditional financial institution oversight—closing a long-standing regulatory gap in AML enforcement.
4. Replacement of Geographic Targeting Orders (GTOs). The rule replaces prior GTOs (which targeted similar all-cash transactions in specific cities, such as New York and Miami) with a permanent, nationwide framework, eliminating geographic limitations and expanding coverage.
Recent Developments
The rule was delayed from its original December 2025 effective date to allow additional time for industry compliance.
Implementation has not been without controversy, including legal challenges and evolving regulatory interpretations, highlighting the complexity of applying AML obligations to real estate transactions.
Practical Implications
Real estate professionals must update compliance programs, train staff, and identify reporting responsibilities in each transaction. Buyers using entities or trusts should expect increased scrutiny and disclosure requirements. Legal and compliance teams should align this rule with broader obligations, including FinCEN’s Corporate Transparency Act reporting (where applicable).
FinCEN’s new rule represents a major shift toward greater transparency in U.S. real estate transactions, particularly those involving opaque ownership structures and cash purchases. Market participants should ensure they understand the scope, reporting triggers, and operational impact to avoid compliance risks.
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