Customer Due Diligence (CDD) is the process of gathering and analyzing information about customers to assess and manage the risks they present. CDD is a cornerstone of anti-money laundering (AML) compliance—it's how financial institutions and other regulated entities know who they're doing business with and whether those relationships pose unacceptable risk.
For business customers, CDD is the regulatory framework that drives KYB (Know Your Business) requirements.
What Is Customer Due Diligence?
CDD encompasses everything an organization does to:
- Identify the customer (individual or entity)
- Verify that identity using reliable sources
- Understand the nature and purpose of the relationship
- Assess risk based on customer characteristics and behavior
- Monitor the relationship on an ongoing basis
CDD isn't a one-time activity at onboarding—it's a continuous process throughout the customer lifecycle.
The FinCEN CDD Rule
In 2016, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued the Customer Due Diligence Requirements for Financial Institutions rule, which took effect in May 2018. This rule formalized CDD requirements for covered financial institutions and, critically, added explicit beneficial ownership requirements for legal entity customers.
Covered Institutions
The CDD Rule applies to:
- Banks and credit unions
- Broker-dealers in securities
- Mutual funds
- Futures commission merchants and introducing brokers in commodities
The Four Pillars
The CDD Rule requires covered institutions to establish and maintain written policies and procedures for:
1. Customer Identification: Identify and verify the identity of customers
2. Beneficial Ownership: Identify and verify beneficial owners of legal entity customers
3. Understanding the Relationship: Understand the nature and purpose of customer relationships
4. Ongoing Monitoring: Conduct ongoing monitoring and update customer information
The beneficial ownership requirement was new—before the CDD Rule, there was no explicit federal requirement to identify the individuals behind business customers.
CDD vs. CIP: What's the Difference?
The Customer Identification Program (CIP) and CDD are related but distinct:
Origin
- CIP: USA PATRIOT Act Section 326 (2001)
- CDD: FinCEN CDD Rule (2016/2018)
Focus
- CIP: Identity verification
- CDD: Risk assessment and understanding
Scope
- CIP: All customers
- CDD: All customers, with emphasis on legal entities
Beneficial ownership
- CIP: Not required
- CDD: Required for legal entity customers
Ongoing monitoring
- CIP: Not explicitly required
- CDD: Explicitly required
CIP establishes the baseline: verify that customers are who they claim to be. CDD builds on this by requiring a deeper understanding of customers and their risk profiles.
Three Levels of Due Diligence
CDD operates on a spectrum based on risk:
Simplified Due Diligence (SDD)
Reduced verification for demonstrably low-risk customers:
- Publicly traded companies with transparent ownership
- Regulated financial institutions
- Government entities
- Established customers with long, clean history
SDD doesn't mean no due diligence—it means proportionately less intensive measures where risk is clearly low.
Standard CDD
The baseline for most customer relationships:
- Full identification and verification
- Beneficial ownership identification (for legal entities)
- Understanding of relationship purpose
- Standard ongoing monitoring
Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD)
Intensified measures for higher-risk customers:
- Deeper investigation into ownership and control
- Source of funds and source of wealth verification
- Senior management approval for relationship
- More frequent and intensive monitoring
- Additional documentation requirements
EDD triggers include:
- PEPs (Politically Exposed Persons)
- High-risk jurisdictions
- Complex ownership structures
- Cash-intensive businesses
- Adverse media or screening hits
- Unusual transaction patterns
CDD for Legal Entity Customers
When the customer is a business rather than an individual, CDD encompasses KYB requirements:
Entity Identification
Collect and verify:
- Full legal name
- Principal place of business address
- State/country of formation
- Taxpayer identification number (EIN in the US)
Beneficial Ownership Identification
Under the CDD Rule, financial institutions must identify:
At least one individual with significant responsibility to control, manage, or direct the legal entity (a "control person"), AND
Each individual who owns 25% or more of the equity interests
For each beneficial owner, collect:
- Name
- Date of birth
- Address
- Identification number (SSN or passport)
This is where CDD intersects directly with UBO verification.
Exemptions
Certain legal entities are exempt from beneficial ownership requirements:
- Regulated financial institutions
- SEC-registered entities
- State-registered investment advisers
- Insurance companies
- Publicly traded companies
- Government entities
- Entities whose beneficial ownership is already available to the financial institution
Risk-Based Approach
CDD must be proportionate to risk. A risk-based approach means:
Assess Inherent Risk
Consider factors that indicate higher or lower risk:
Customer type
- Individual vs. legal entity
- Industry and business model
- Domestic vs. foreign
Geographic risk
- Country of incorporation/residence
- Countries of operation
- Jurisdictions with weak AML controls
Product/service risk
- Transaction types and volumes
- Cross-border activity
- Cash handling
Channel risk
- Face-to-face vs. remote onboarding
- Introduced business vs. direct relationship
Apply Proportionate Measures
Low: SDD — streamlined verification, standard monitoring
Medium: Standard CDD — full verification, regular monitoring
High: EDD — enhanced verification, intensive monitoring, senior approval
Document Risk Decisions
Record:
- The risk factors considered
- The risk rating assigned
- The rationale for the rating
- The due diligence measures applied
Ongoing CDD
CDD doesn't end at onboarding. Ongoing CDD includes:
Transaction Monitoring
Monitor customer activity for:
- Transactions inconsistent with expected behavior
- Unusual patterns or volumes
- Transactions involving high-risk jurisdictions
- Potential suspicious activity
Periodic Review
Reassess customer risk periodically:
High risk: Annually or more frequently
Medium risk: Every 2-3 years
Low risk: Every 3-5 years
Trigger-Based Review
Re-evaluate when:
- Adverse information emerges
- Customer requests unusual products or services
- Transaction patterns change significantly
- Ownership or control changes
- Regulatory guidance changes
Keep customer information current:
- Request updated documentation at reviews
- Monitor for changes via registries and data providers
- Require customers to report material changes
Documentation Requirements
Maintain records demonstrating:
- What information was collected — customer identification, beneficial ownership, business purpose
- How it was verified — sources used, documents reviewed, checks performed
- Risk assessment — factors considered, rating assigned, rationale
- Decisions made — relationship approval, conditions imposed, EDD measures
- Ongoing monitoring — reviews conducted, alerts investigated, actions taken
Retention requirements vary by jurisdiction but typically require keeping CDD records for at least 5 years after the relationship ends.
Common CDD Challenges
Balancing Thoroughness and Friction
More due diligence means more customer friction. Organizations must find the right balance:
- Risk-based approach helps—apply intensity where it's needed
- Technology and automation reduce manual burden
- Clear communication helps customers understand requirements
Data Quality and Availability
CDD depends on reliable data, but:
- Business registries vary in quality and accessibility
- Beneficial ownership information may be incomplete
- Some jurisdictions have limited public records
Customer circumstances change:
- Ownership transfers happen
- Businesses expand to new jurisdictions
- Risk profiles evolve
Ongoing monitoring and periodic reviews are essential but resource-intensive.
Regulatory Divergence
Different jurisdictions have different CDD requirements:
- Varying ownership thresholds
- Different exempt entity categories
- Inconsistent documentation standards
Global organizations must navigate overlapping and sometimes conflicting requirements.
Key Takeaways
- CDD is the framework for knowing your customers and assessing their risk
- The FinCEN CDD Rule established four pillars including beneficial ownership requirements
- Three levels — SDD, standard CDD, and EDD — apply based on risk
- For legal entities, CDD encompasses KYB including UBO identification
- Risk-based approach means proportionate measures based on assessed risk
- Ongoing CDD — monitoring, reviews, and updates — continues throughout the relationship
- Documentation is critical for demonstrating compliance