Enigma Knowledge

Compliance

UBO Verification: Identifying Ultimate Beneficial Owners

February 5, 2026

Learn how to identify and verify Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBOs) for KYB compliance, including ownership thresholds, verification methods, and common challenges.

Ultimate Beneficial Owner (UBO) verification is the process of identifying the natural persons who ultimately own or control a business entity. It's the most critical—and often most challenging—component of KYB (Know Your Business) compliance.

Regulators worldwide require UBO identification because corporate structures can obscure who truly benefits from a company's activities. Without UBO verification, shell companies become vehicles for money laundering, sanctions evasion, and fraud.

What Is a UBO?

A Ultimate Beneficial Owner is a natural person (a human being, not another company) who:

  1. Owns a significant stake in the company—typically 25% or more of shares or ownership interests, OR
  2. Exercises significant control over the company, regardless of ownership percentage

The key word is "ultimate." If Company A owns Company B, and Person X owns Company A, then Person X is the ultimate beneficial owner of Company B—even though their name doesn't appear on Company B's documents.

Ownership Threshold

Most jurisdictions use 25% as the ownership threshold for UBO status:

United States (CTA/CDD Rule): 25%

European Union (AMLD): 25%

United Kingdom: 25% (PSC register)

FATF Recommendation: 25% (suggested)

Some jurisdictions or situations may require lower thresholds (10% for high-risk sectors, for example), and some organizations apply stricter internal policies.

Control Without Ownership

A person can be a UBO through control even without meeting the ownership threshold. Control indicators include:

  • Serving as a senior officer (CEO, CFO, COO, general counsel)
  • Authority to appoint or remove directors or senior management
  • Power to make or veto major business decisions
  • Control through contractual arrangements, financing agreements, or other means
  • Significant influence through family relationships or close associations

This is why UBO verification requires looking beyond shareholder registers.

Why UBO Verification Matters

Regulatory Requirement

Multiple regulations mandate UBO identification:

  • Corporate Transparency Act — BOI reporting to FinCEN (for foreign entities)
  • FinCEN CDD Rule — Banks must identify beneficial owners when opening accounts
  • EU Anti-Money Laundering Directives — UBO registries and verification requirements
  • FATF Recommendations 24 & 25 — International standards for beneficial ownership transparency

Risk Management

UBO verification protects organizations from:

  • Sanctions violations — Ensuring you're not doing business with sanctioned individuals hiding behind corporate structures
  • Money laundering — Preventing criminals from using your services to move illicit funds
  • Fraud — Verifying that the people behind a business are who they claim to be
  • Reputational damage — Avoiding association with bad actors

Due Diligence Foundation

UBO information feeds into broader customer due diligence (CDD):

The UBO Verification Process

Step 1: Collect Ownership Information

Start by gathering information about the company's ownership structure:

From the customer:

  • Beneficial ownership declaration form
  • Organizational chart showing ownership percentages
  • List of all shareholders/members with ownership stakes

From official sources:

  • Business registry filings
  • Annual reports (for public companies)
  • UBO registries (where available)

Step 2: Trace Through Ownership Layers

When a company is owned by other companies, trace the ownership chain to find the natural persons at the top:

Target Company (verifying this entity)
    ↑ 60% owned by
Holding Company A (Delaware LLC)
    ↑ 100% owned by
Trust B
    ↑ Beneficiary:
Person X ← This is the UBO

Calculate effective ownership through the chain:

  • Person X owns 100% of Trust B
  • Trust B owns 100% of Holding Company A
  • Holding Company A owns 60% of Target Company
  • Person X's effective ownership of Target Company = 60%

Step 3: Identify Control Persons

Separately identify individuals who exercise control without ownership:

  • Senior officers (CEO, CFO, etc.)
  • Directors with significant authority
  • Individuals with veto power or decision-making authority
  • Anyone who "calls the shots"

These individuals are UBOs regardless of whether they own any shares.

Step 4: Verify UBO Identity

For each identified UBO, perform KYC verification:

  • Identity verification — Government-issued ID (passport, driver's license)
  • Address verification — Proof of residential address
  • Screening — Check against sanctions lists, PEP databases, and adverse media

Step 5: Document and Monitor

  • Record all UBO information and supporting documentation
  • Note the verification methods and sources used
  • Establish triggers for re-verification (ownership changes, adverse information)
  • Monitor for changes in ownership or control

Common Challenges

Complex Ownership Structures

Real-world ownership is often more complicated than a simple chain:

  • Multiple layers — Ownership through several intermediate entities across jurisdictions
  • Circular ownership — Company A owns Company B owns Company A
  • Mixed structures — Combinations of corporations, LLCs, partnerships, trusts
  • Fractional ownership — Many shareholders with small stakes that aggregate above thresholds

Nominee Arrangements

Nominees are individuals or entities that hold assets on behalf of others:

  • Nominee shareholders who hold shares for the true owner
  • Nominee directors who serve at the direction of others
  • Professional service providers acting as corporate officers

Nominees must be looked through to identify the underlying beneficial owners.

Trusts and Foundations

Trusts present unique challenges:

  • Settlor — Who established the trust
  • Trustee — Who manages trust assets
  • Beneficiaries — Who benefits from the trust
  • Protector — Who oversees the trustee

Depending on the jurisdiction and trust type, any of these roles may constitute beneficial ownership.

Jurisdictional Gaps

Not all jurisdictions require or maintain UBO registries:

  • Some countries have no public business registry
  • Privacy jurisdictions may limit available information
  • Data quality and currency vary widely
  • Information may be in foreign languages or formats

Uncooperative Customers

Customers may be unable or unwilling to provide complete ownership information:

  • Privacy concerns
  • Complex structures they don't fully understand
  • Intentional obfuscation
  • Legitimate confidentiality requirements

Verification Methods

Self-Declaration

Collect UBO information directly from the customer through forms and attestations.

Pros: Simple, covers control relationships not in public records Cons: Relies on customer honesty, no independent verification

Registry Lookup

Check official business registries and UBO registries.

Pros: Authoritative source, covers registered ownership Cons: May be incomplete, outdated, or unavailable; doesn't capture control

Document Review

Review corporate documents (articles of incorporation, operating agreements, share certificates).

Pros: Detailed ownership information, shows governance structure Cons: Time-consuming, requires interpretation, may be outdated

Third-Party Data

Use commercial data providers that aggregate ownership information.

Pros: Broader coverage, structured data, ongoing monitoring Cons: Cost, data quality varies, still may have gaps

Corroboration

Cross-reference multiple sources to validate ownership claims.

Pros: Higher confidence, catches discrepancies Cons: Resource-intensive, requires multiple data sources

Best Practices

Risk-Based Approach

Apply proportionate verification based on risk:

Lower risk: Self-declaration + registry check

Standard: Declaration + registry + document review

Higher risk: All sources + independent verification + EDD

Document Your Process

Maintain clear records of:

  • What information was collected
  • What sources were checked
  • What verification was performed
  • What conclusions were reached
  • What gaps or uncertainties remain

Set Re-Verification Triggers

UBO information changes. Establish triggers for re-verification:

  • Periodic review (annually for standard risk, more frequently for high risk)
  • Material transaction thresholds
  • Adverse media alerts
  • Customer-reported changes
  • Registry change notifications (where available)

Handle Incomplete Information

When complete UBO information isn't available:

  1. Document the efforts made to obtain information
  2. Assess whether to proceed with the relationship
  3. Apply enhanced monitoring if proceeding
  4. Consider whether the gap itself is a red flag

Key Takeaways

  • UBOs are natural persons who own 25%+ or exercise significant control
  • Trace through layers to find the humans behind corporate structures
  • Control matters as much as ownership—identify who makes decisions
  • Verify UBO identity with the same rigor as individual KYC
  • Document everything — your process, sources, and conclusions
  • Monitor ongoing — ownership changes, so verification isn't one-time
  • Risk-based approach — proportionate effort based on relationship risk