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Austria falling short in fight against money laundering, says global watchdog

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 5:13 PM

By Francois Murphy

VIENNA, April 30 (Reuters) – Austria continues to fall short in its investigation and prosecution of money laundering despite facing a range of illicit finance threats as ​a gateway to Eastern Europe, the global financial ‌crime watchdog said in a report on Thursday.

The Paris-based Financial Action Task Force found in the so-called mutual evaluation report, a review carried out by experts from other FATF countries, that while Austria had made some progress ‌since ​its last such review 10 years ago, ⁠much still needed to ⁠be done.

“While Austria has improved its understanding and assessment of money laundering and terrorist financing risks since its last mutual evaluation, a nuanced and consistent risk understanding across all competent ​authorities is yet to be achieved,” the FATF, an intergovernmental body, said in a statement.

Weaknesses identified included “insufficient resources as well ⁠as limitations in operational independence” at ⁠the Austrian Financial Intelligence Unit, a unit of ​the Criminal Intelligence Service that deals with money laundering, the FATF ​said.

The punishment imposed for money laundering offences in Austria ‌is also not effective in dissuading would-be offenders, the watchdog said, adding that such sanctions had not yet been applied against any legal person, such as a company.

“Restrictive interpretations of the money ⁠laundering offence and high standards of proof continue to limit investigation and prosecution,” the FATF said, adding that the number of money laundering ⁠convictions remains low.

There ‌are also too few investigators and prosecutors to ⁠ensure the recovery of assets linked to ​financial crimes, ‌and the level of seized assets returned ​to victims ⁠is low, it said.

The report recommended improvements Austria should make in the next three years, including: “ensuring its financial intelligence unit is appropriately resourced and taking steps to ensure authorities can effectively secure prosecution of the full range of money laundering offences”.

(Reporting by Francois Murphy, Editing ​by Franklin Paul)