UK Market • Multi-layered Smart analysis • Updated June 2026
A Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO) is the named individual legally responsible for a firm's anti-money laundering regime, typically holding the SMF17 controlled function under the FCA's Senior Managers and Certification Regime. Day-to-day, the MLRO reviews internal suspicious activity reports raised by front-line and compliance staff, decides which warrant disclosure, and personally submits Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) to the National Crime Agency. They oversee transaction monitoring alerts, sanctions and PEP screening, and customer due diligence escalations, making defendable risk decisions and documenting them carefully. Beyond casework, the MLRO drafts and maintains AML policies, conducts the firm-wide financial crime risk assessment, delivers staff training, and produces the annual MLRO report for the board. They usually report to the board, audit committee or a Head of Compliance, and act as the firm's primary point of contact for the FCA and law enforcement. In smaller fintechs and crypto firms the MLRO may be a sole operator wearing several compliance hats; in larger banks they lead a financial crime team of analysts and investigators. The role carries genuine personal regulatory liability, so sound judgement, independence and the credibility to challenge commercial decisions are as important as technical AML knowledge.
Regulatory Reporting (FCA / NCA) — 72% demand vs 48% supply (24-point gap)
Many candidates understand AML rules but lack experience personally owning SAR submissions to the NCA and direct FCA correspondence, which is precisely the accountability employers need in an MLRO.
Sanctions & PEP Screening — 68% demand vs 46% supply (22-point gap)
The volume and complexity of sanctions regimes since 2022 has outpaced the supply of MLROs who can confidently own screening calibration and false-positive management end to end.
Cryptoasset & Virtual Currency AML — 30% demand vs 9% supply (21-point gap)
Crypto firms must appoint an MLRO with virtual asset AML expertise to meet FCA registration requirements, but few traditional compliance professionals have practical blockchain analytics experience, creating an acute shortage.
AI/ML-Based Transaction Monitoring — 24% demand vs 8% supply (16-point gap)
Firms are adopting machine-learning monitoring platforms faster than MLROs can build the technical literacy to validate, tune and defend these models to regulators, leaving a meaningful capability gap.
Where the Money Laundering Reporting Officer role sits relative to nearby roles in the market — what genuinely distinguishes it.
How people enter this role: Most MLROs arrive after several years as an AML Analyst, Financial Crime Investigator or Compliance Officer, often supplemented by ICA Diploma or ACAMS certification. Some convert from law enforcement, audit or legal backgrounds. The role requires demonstrable AML experience because regulators must approve the SMF17 appointment.
Typical progression: AML Analyst → Deputy MLRO → Money Laundering Reporting Officer → Head of Financial Crime → Chief Compliance Officer
Typical tenure in role: ~36 months
Common lateral moves: Head of Compliance, Financial Crime Risk Manager, Sanctions Compliance Officer
The most sought-after skills for Money Laundering Reporting Officer roles in the UK include Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Regulations, Suspicious Activity Reporting (SAR) Submission, Know Your Customer (KYC) / Customer Due Diligence, Financial Crime Risk Assessment, UK Money Laundering Regulations 2017 / POCA 2002. These are classified as essential by the majority of employers.
The median Money Laundering Reporting Officer salary in the UK is £62,000, with a typical range of £42,000 to £95,000 depending on experience and location. In London, the median rises to £75,000 reflecting the capital's cost-of-living weighting.
Freelance and contract Money Laundering Reporting Officer day rates in the UK typically range from £425 to £850 per day, with a median of £600/day. London-based contractors can expect around £700/day.
The top skills gaps in the Money Laundering Reporting Officer market are Regulatory Reporting (FCA / NCA), Sanctions & PEP Screening, Cryptoasset & Virtual Currency AML, AI/ML-Based Transaction Monitoring. The largest is Regulatory Reporting (FCA / NCA) with 72% employer demand but only 48% of professionals listing it. Many candidates understand AML rules but lack experience personally owning SAR submissions to the NCA and direct FCA correspondence, which is precisely the accountability employers need in an MLRO.
Emerging skills for Money Laundering Reporting Officer roles include Cryptoasset & Virtual Currency AML, AI/ML-Based Transaction Monitoring, Perpetual KYC (pKYC), RegTech Implementation, ESG & Trade-Based Money Laundering Analysis. These are increasingly appearing in job postings and represent future demand.
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