Behind the Compliance Curtain: The Future of AML in Australia
Australia’s sunny financial reputation has come under scrutiny—and this time, the spotlight is global.
From casino scandals to multi-billion-dollar remittance breaches, the country’s anti-money laundering (AML) framework is facing a pivotal moment. What was once seen as a gold standard in regional governance is now under pressure to catch up—and compliance officers across banks, fintechs, and regulatory bodies are watching closely.
So what lies behind the curtain of AML in Australia today—and what must the financial community do next?

The AML Landscape in Australia: Where Things Stand
Australia’s AML/CFT regime has long been led by AUSTRAC, the nation’s financial intelligence unit and regulator. Over the past few years, AUSTRAC has made headlines with major enforcement actions:
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Westpac (2020): A $1.3 billion penalty over 23 million breaches of AML laws.
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Crown Resorts (2022): Systemic failure to monitor high-risk transactions, especially tied to junket operators and casinos.
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Star Entertainment Group (2022): Similar failings in AML controls and customer due diligence.
These cases revealed a troubling pattern: AML risks were known, red flags existed, but institutions lacked either the technology, urgency, or capability to respond in real time.
More worryingly, Australia’s AML legal framework—particularly its coverage of non-financial sectors like lawyers, accountants, real estate agents, and high-value dealers—remains incomplete. This gap in regulatory coverage continues to raise red flags with global watchdogs, especially the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).
The Tranche 2 Reforms: Closing the Gaps or Buying Time?
For nearly two decades, Australia has delayed implementing the so-called Tranche 2 reforms, which would bring designated non-financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs) into the AML regulatory net.
What Tranche 2 Proposes:
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AML obligations for real estate professionals, lawyers, accountants, and company service providers.
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Stronger beneficial ownership transparency.
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Enhanced customer due diligence and reporting mechanisms across non-financial channels.
Yet, while successive governments have pledged action, progress has been sluggish. Industry bodies have raised concerns about cost, feasibility, and regulatory overreach. But international momentum is building, and patience is wearing thin.
In its 2023 follow-up review, FATF explicitly called out Australia’s delayed reforms. Without Tranche 2, the country faces increased scrutiny—and potential reputational damage that could affect correspondent banking relationships and investor trust.

The Tech Factor: How Modern AML Looks in 2025
Even where regulations exist, legacy compliance systems are struggling to keep up with today’s threats. Financial crime has evolved. So must the tools to fight it.
What’s Changed:
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Speed: Real-time payments and digital wallets mean funds can be layered, split, and moved across jurisdictions in seconds.
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Complexity: Fraudsters are using mules, shell companies, and social engineering to blend illicit flows with legitimate ones.
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Volume: Transaction volumes are rising, making manual reviews and static rules increasingly unviable.
Modern AML compliance now demands real-time monitoring, behavioural analysis, and AI-driven detection engines that adapt to new patterns as they emerge. This is where advanced platforms like Tookitaki’s FinCense come in—offering scenario-driven intelligence and federated learning capabilities tailored for high-risk markets like Australia.
Case Insight: Where Detection Failed—and Where Tech Could Have Helped
Consider the AUSTRAC case against Crown Resorts. Red flags—such as large, unexplained cash deposits, transactions linked to politically exposed persons (PEPs), and high-risk jurisdictions—were not acted upon for months, sometimes years.
The problem wasn’t a lack of data. It was a failure to connect the dots in real time.
With an adaptive AML system like FinCense in place, the scenario might have looked different:
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Suspicious transaction patterns would have triggered real-time alerts.
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Beneficiary risk scoring could have flagged high-risk links earlier.
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AI-based learning could have surfaced anomalous activity invisible to static rule sets.
The outcome? Faster intervention, reduced institutional risk, and regulatory confidence.
Building the Future: Tookitaki’s Role in Strengthening Australia’s AML Defences
Tookitaki’s FinCense platform is designed for the complexity of modern financial ecosystems—especially those navigating regulatory reform and reputational pressure, like Australia.
Key Features That Matter:
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Federated Learning Engine: Enables institutions to learn from emerging typologies across the region—without sharing sensitive data.
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Real-Time Transaction Monitoring: Uses AI to surface anomalous patterns and risk indicators at the speed of today’s financial crime.
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Scenario-Based Approach: Combines regulatory intelligence with real-world cases to keep detection capabilities relevant and context-rich.
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Audit-Ready Investigations: Helps compliance teams manage alerts, document findings, and demonstrate control effectiveness.
As Tranche 2 looms and regulatory expectations rise, FinCense can help banks and fintechs in Australia stay ahead of both criminal innovation and regulatory demand.
What Compliance Teams Must Do Now
✅ Prepare for Tranche 2 (Even If It’s Not Here Yet)
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Map exposure to DNFBPs.
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Engage with vendors and consultants to scope out necessary controls.
✅ Build for Agility and Resilience
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Invest in dynamic risk-scoring engines and AI-powered analytics.
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Integrate systems that can adapt, not just flag transactions.
✅ Collaborate and Learn
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Participate in intelligence-sharing platforms like the AFC Ecosystem.
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Use scenario libraries to anticipate typologies before they strike.
✅ Rethink ROI from an AML Lens
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With regulators now tracking the effectiveness (not just existence) of AML systems, demonstrate real-time capability, reduced false positives, and improved investigation turnaround.

Conclusion: The Curtain’s Up—What Will Australia Do Next?
Australia stands at a crossroads. Behind the curtain of its legacy AML system lies both risk and opportunity.
The risk is clear: continued global scrutiny, regulatory gaps, and potential grey listing if reforms stall.
But the opportunity is greater: to lead the region with tech-driven, intelligence-led compliance that’s faster, smarter, and more collaborative than ever.
As the regulatory environment evolves, so must the institutions within it. With the right partners, like Tookitaki, and a commitment to real-time defences, Australia can transform its AML posture from reactive to revolutionary.
Because in the fight against financial crime, detection is no longer enough. It’s time to defend.
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