Australia’s AML/CTF Act is expanding. From 1 July 2026, a new wave of “Gatekeeper” professions — accountants, lawyers, conveyancers, and real estate professionals — must comply with the same anti-money laundering obligations that have applied to banks and financial institutions for years. This guide explains what the reforms mean, who they affect, and what you need to do before the deadline.Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.clearaml.com.au/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
What are the Tranche 2 reforms?
Tranche 2 is the second stage of Australia’s Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing (AML/CTF) Act. It extends regulation to professions that act as “gatekeepers” to the financial system — people whose work can be exploited to move, hide, or legitimise proceeds of crime. Under Tranche 2, accountants, real estate professionals, and lawyers must:- Enrol with AUSTRAC as a reporting entity
- Appoint a dedicated AML/CTF Compliance Officer
- Implement a written AML/CTF Risk Management Program
- Verify the identity of all clients receiving designated services
- Report suspicious matters and certain transactions to AUSTRAC
Who is affected?
Accountants
Tax agents, business advisors, and trust managers who manage client money, form companies, or act as trustees.
Lawyers & Conveyancers
Solicitors, conveyancers, and notaries providing services related to asset transactions or legal entity creation.
Real Estate Professionals
Sales agents, buyer’s agents, property developers, and property managers who facilitate sales or manage client funds.
Key compliance dates
August 2025 — Legislation introduced
The Tranche 2 reform bills were introduced to the Australian Parliament.
October 2025 — Bills pass the Senate
The legislation passed both chambers and received Royal Assent.
January 2026 — AUSTRAC sector-specific guidance published
AUSTRAC released sector-specific rules and guidance for each newly regulated profession.
31 March 2026 — Enrolment opens
Registration with AUSTRAC opened for newly regulated entities. You can enrol now at austrac.gov.au.
1 July 2026 — Obligations go live
All compliance obligations become mandatory. You must have your AML/CTF Program in place, a Compliance Officer appointed, and KYC commenced on all clients receiving designated services.
The three pillars of compliance
Tranche 2 is not just about checking IDs. AUSTRAC expects you to run a holistic program to manage financial crime risk across three core areas.1. KYC & Customer Due Diligence
You must verify the identity of every client before providing designated services. For companies and trusts, this includes tracing beneficial owners (UBOs). ClearAML performs electronic verification (DVS), biometric liveness checks, and global PEP & sanctions screening.
2. Reporting
You act as the eyes and ears of AUSTRAC. You must submit a Suspicious Matter Report (SMR) whenever a transaction or client behaviour raises a red flag, and a Threshold Transaction Report (TTR) for qualifying cash transactions.
3. AML/CTF Program
You must have a written AML/CTF Program tailored to your firm’s specific risks. It must include a risk assessment matrix, staff training records, and be reviewed on a regular basis by an independent reviewer.
Penalties for non-compliance
AUSTRAC has significant enforcement powers under the AML/CTF Act. Civil penalties for non-compliance include:- Corporations — up to $22.2 million per contravention
- Individuals — up to $2.22 million per contravention
A “contravention” can apply to each individual failure — for example, failing to verify each client, or failing to file each required SMR, can each constitute a separate contravention.
How ClearAML helps
ClearAML is built specifically for the professions caught by Tranche 2. It automates the compliance workflows that the legislation requires:| Task | Without ClearAML | With ClearAML |
|---|---|---|
| Identity verification | Manual ID photocopies | Biometric digital ID (DVS) |
| PEP & sanctions screening | Ad-hoc Google searches | Global watchlist API |
| Risk assessment | Excel spreadsheets | Dynamic scoring engine |
| Record keeping | Filing cabinet (7 years) | Secure cloud vault |
Frequently asked questions
When is the exact start date for Tranche 2?
When is the exact start date for Tranche 2?
The Tranche 2 reforms commence on 1 July 2026. Enrolment with AUSTRAC opened on 31 March 2026, and the deadline for new entities to enrol is 29 July 2026. Source: AUSTRAC.
What is the penalty for non-compliance?
What is the penalty for non-compliance?
Civil penalties for corporations can reach 2.22 million per contravention. AUSTRAC can also issue infringement notices and enforce remedial directions.
Do I need to appoint a Compliance Officer?
Do I need to appoint a Compliance Officer?
Yes. All reporting entities must appoint a dedicated AML/CTF Compliance Officer. This person is responsible for maintaining the AML/CTF Program, submitting SMRs and TTRs to AUSTRAC, and ensuring staff training is up to date. For smaller firms, this can be a senior staff member or director.
Does this apply to all real estate agents?
Does this apply to all real estate agents?
The reforms apply specifically to real estate professionals involved in broking, sales, and property management where they facilitate transactions or manage client funds. It also captures buyer’s agents and property developers who sell their own developments.
What does AUSTRAC expect by 1 July 2026?
What does AUSTRAC expect by 1 July 2026?
By 1 July 2026, AUSTRAC expects all Tranche 2 entities to have: completed AUSTRAC enrolment, implemented a fully documented AML/CTF Risk Management Program, appointed a Compliance Officer, and commenced active customer due diligence (KYC) on all new and existing clients receiving designated services.