UK law firms are facing one of the most significant regulatory shake-ups in a generation. Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance—already a major operational burden—is entering a new phase that will fundamentally change how solicitors are supervised.
What’s Changing in 2026?
Historically, AML supervision for solicitors has been overseen by the legal regulator. However, the Financial Conduct Authority is moving towards a more direct and assertive oversight role across professional services. This shift reflects growing government concern that fragmented supervision has allowed inconsistencies in AML enforcement.
At the same time, the Solicitors Regulation Authority is conducting its Consumer Protection Review, closing in February 2026. One of the most controversial questions under consideration is whether law firms should continue to hold client money at all.
If implemented, this would represent an existential change to how many firms operate, particularly in conveyancing, probate, and litigation practices.
Why Firms Should Be Concerned
Regulators are no longer satisfied with paper compliance. The SRA has repeatedly signalled that it will focus on whether firms’ AML policies are genuinely embedded in day-to-day practice.
Key risk areas include:
- Over-reliance on templated AML policies
- Inconsistent client due diligence
- Weak source-of-funds checks
- Delegation of compliance without effective oversight
Under enhanced FCA-style supervision, enforcement is expected to become more data-driven, more frequent, and more punitive.
What Firms Should Be Doing Now
Forward-looking firms are already:
- Stress-testing their AML procedures against real case scenarios
- Auditing whether staff actually follow documented policies
- Reviewing whether holding client money remains commercially viable
- Updating public-facing compliance statements
Clients, lenders, and referrers are also becoming more compliance-aware—meaning regulatory credibility is now a marketing asset, not just a defensive measure.
Why Visibility Matters in a Regulatory Climate
As regulatory scrutiny intensifies, clients increasingly look for firms that project trust, transparency, and professionalism online. Being clearly listed, categorised, and up to date on reputable legal directories is part of that credibility signal.
Claim your listing on Legal Means Direct to:
- Ensure your compliance credentials are visible to clients
- Access ongoing regulatory insights
- Be featured in future AML and regulatory updates
👉 Firms are welcome to reference or link to this article from their own compliance or blog pages to help clients understand the changing AML landscape.









