Create KYC questions for your risk matrix
To effectively formulate KYC (Know Your Customer) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) questions that link directly to your risk assessment and mitigate identified risks, you need to design a question framework that:
- Collects relevant information based on the customer’s risk profile.
- Provides insights that allow you to apply appropriate controls.
Example:
1. Start With Your Risk Assessment Categories
Identify the key risk factors from your AML risk assessment, such as:
- Customer type (individual, corporate, PEP, etc.)
- Geography (high-risk countries, sanctioned jurisdictions)
- Products/services used (cash-intensive, crypto, wire transfers, etc.)
- Delivery channel (non-face-to-face, intermediaries)
- Transaction patterns (volume, frequency, complexity)
- Purpose and nature of the business relationship
2. Design Risk-Based Questions Aligned to Each Factor
Below are some examples of how you can formulate your questions based on different categories.
Customer Type
Purpose: Understand who the customer is and their potential risk.
- What is the customer’s occupation or business activity?
- Are they a Politically Exposed Person (PEP), or related to one?
- What is their legal structure and ownership (for corporate clients)?
- Who are the ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs)?
Mitigates: Unknown UBO risk, front/false businesses, PEP risk
Geography
Purpose: Identify exposure to high-risk jurisdictions.
- Where is the customer domiciled?
- Where do they conduct business?
- Do they send/receive funds to/from high-risk jurisdictions?
Mitigates: Sanctions exposure, corruption risk, lack of regulatory supervision
Products/Services Used
Purpose: Understand the AML exposure of specific offerings.
- Which of our products/services does the customer plan to use?
- Will they use services like international wires, cash deposits, or crypto?
Mitigates: Product misuse, layering through complex transactions
Delivery Channel
Purpose: Assess anonymity and impersonation risk.
- How did the customer onboard (online, in person, through an agent)?
- Will ongoing interactions be non-face-to-face?
Mitigates: Identity fraud, shell account creation
Transaction Behavior
Purpose: Set expected transaction benchmarks.
- What is the expected volume and value of transactions per month?
- Will they transact with third parties or related businesses?
Mitigates: Structuring, unusual behavior, third-party laundering
Purpose and Business Relationship
Purpose: Understand the legitimate reason for the relationship.
- What is the purpose of the account/relationship?
- What are the sources of funds and wealth?
Mitigates: Use of account as a pass-through, undeclared income, layering
To see how you can work with different risk levels click here.
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