Accounting Compliance Solutions for Africa & Asia

AML and KYC technologies for accountants, auditors, and financial advisors in emerging markets

Regional Regulatory Expertise
Africa & Asia Focused
DNFBP Compliance

Accounting Professional Compliance Challenges

Meeting regulatory obligations while providing financial services

Accounting professionals face significant AML obligations when providing services such as company formation, managing client funds, tax advisory, and financial structuring. As gatekeepers to the financial system, accountants must implement robust compliance procedures while maintaining client service standards.

Key compliance challenges for accounting professionals include:

  • Client risk assessment for new and existing accounting clients
  • Beneficial ownership verification for complex business structures
  • Transaction monitoring for unusual patterns and suspicious activities
  • Record-keeping requirements for compliance documentation
  • Balancing regulatory obligations with client service and operational efficiency

The Anqa Solution for Accounting Professionals

Client Risk Profiling

Automated risk assessment tools designed specifically for accounting clients, with industry-specific risk factors and scoring.

Digital Client Onboarding

Streamlined KYC processes that integrate with your existing practice management systems for efficient client verification.

Watchlist Screening

Screen clients and beneficial owners against global sanctions lists with our Screening Suite's fuzzy matching technology.

Reporting Capabilities

Basic audit logging and reporting tools to help meet record-keeping requirements for accounting firms.

Managing High-Risk Services

Company Formation

Risk assessment and screening capabilities to help meet compliance requirements when providing incorporation services.

Client Account Management

Basic customer risk assessment tools to help classify clients based on risk factors when managing client accounts.

Trust and Company Services

Structured risk assessment and screening tools for accountants providing trustee and corporate services.

Tax Advisory

Risk assessment tools to evaluate client tax profiles as part of your comprehensive customer due diligence process.

Benefits for Accounting Professionals

Reduce Compliance Overhead

Automate customer onboarding processes to lower costs and free up valuable staff time.

Protect Your Practice

Safeguard your firm's reputation and avoid regulatory penalties with robust compliance processes.

Maintain Client Satisfaction

Implement compliance measures that minimize friction in client relationships and service delivery.

Simplified Audit Preparation

Maintain comprehensive compliance records for regulatory inspections and practice quality reviews.

Accountants & Accounting Firms FAQs

  • Yes. If your firm helps clients with services like company formation, trust setup, managing funds, or real estate transactions, you’re likely considered a “designated non-financial business” (DNFBP) under AML laws. This means you must perform KYC, monitor risk, and follow AML and sanctions rules.

  • Accountants should:

    • Collect and verify valid ID and address documents

    • Identify beneficial owners for companies or trusts

    • Understand the purpose of the engagement

    • Assess source of funds or wealth where needed

    This forms part of a risk-based onboarding process.

  • Clients may be sanctioned individuals or linked to restricted jurisdictions. Accountants must screen clients and entities against global and local watchlists (e.g. UN, OFAC, EU). This helps avoid unintentional involvement in financial crime or prohibited transactions.

  • Risk assessment involves scoring each client based on:

    • Type of service (e.g. tax filing vs shell company setup)

    • Jurisdiction (domestic vs offshore)

    • Client profile (PEP, high cash business, etc.)

    This risk level dictates the depth of due diligence required—Simplified, Standard, or Enhanced (EDD).

    • Clients refusing to provide full information

    • Payments from third parties not listed in the engagement

    • Use of multiple entities with unclear relationships

    • Requests for nominee directors or complex structures

    • Links to sanctioned countries or politically exposed persons

  • Yes. Even small or solo accounting firms must comply with AML laws if they help clients with things like company formation, tax structuring, or managing funds. Regulators in countries like Nigeria, Kenya, India, and the Philippines include accountants as “designated non-financial businesses” (DNFBPs).

     

    But the approach can be scaled. Small or solo practices must still:

    • Conduct risk-based KYC

    • Keep records of due diligence

    • Report suspicious activity

    • Screen clients for sanctions

    Anqa’s platform helps firms right-size their compliance without excessive overhead.

  • Risk assessments and KYC should be reviewed:

    • Periodically (e.g. every 12–24 months)

    • When there’s a significant change in the client’s business or ownership

    • When red flags or new risks emerge

    Ongoing monitoring is a key part of AML compliance.

  • Anqa offers:

    • Automated ID verification and KYC workflows

    • Built-in sanctions and PEP screening

    • Risk scoring templates tailored for professional services

    • Simple audit-ready logs for regulatory reporting

  • Accountants must:

    • Identify and verify clients (Customer Due Diligence)

    • Assess and document AML risk

    • Report suspicious transactions

    • Maintain records for 5+ years

    • Train staff on compliance

    An AML programme doesn’t need to be complex—but it must be active and up to date.

  • An AML risk assessment helps accountants understand where their business is exposed to money laundering risks. You’ll assess client types, services offered, countries involved, and transaction patterns. This risk rating then shapes your CDD and ongoing monitoring strategy.

  • Small firms can start with basic steps:

    • Collect national ID and proof of address

    • Ask for source of funds for high-value or unusual transactions

    • Check for sanctions or politically exposed persons (PEPs)

    • Use free or affordable tools like Anqa to manage checks and logs

  • Examples include:

    • Clients unwilling to share information

    • Complex ownership structures with no clear purpose

    • Large cash payments or cryptocurrency use

    • Services paid for by third parties

    • Frequent changes in instructions or jurisdictions

Ready to streamline compliance for your accounting practice?

Get in touch to learn how Anqa can help your firm meet regulatory requirements while enhancing client service.