Kuwait has landed on the “grey list” of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a move that puts the Gulf nation under heightened international monitoring for weaknesses in its money laundering and terrorist financing controls.
The decision was made last week at the FATF’s plenary meeting in Mexico. While this grey-listing doesn’t amount to sanctions, it does mean that Kuwait’s financial system will now face closer scrutiny from global regulators. As a result, banks and multinational companies are likely to ramp up compliance checks and due diligence when engaging with Kuwaiti businesses or financial institutions.
Why was Kuwait grey-listed?
An FATF report last year found Kuwait had only a basic understanding of its money laundering risks, and its grasp of terrorist financing threats at the national level was considered low. However, since then, the watchdog has acknowledged “significant progress” by Kuwaiti authorities in addressing many of the issues raised.
Being grey-listed means that, while Kuwait isn’t facing direct penalties, its financial sector will be subject to tougher onboarding procedures, more rigorous monitoring, and increased scrutiny of cross-border transactions.
A turning point for reform
The timing is significant for Kuwait, which is pushing ahead with long-delayed reforms to diversify its economy and boost its investment climate after years of political gridlock. As part of its FATF action plan, Kuwait has promised to tighten oversight of higher-risk sectors like real estate and precious metals, and to increase transparency around who actually owns businesses and assets—a common sticking point for countries on the grey list.
Recent changes include updated property ownership laws allowing some expatriates to own real estate, a new 15-year investor residency scheme, and proposals for a freelance-work permit designed to clamp down on residency trafficking and formalize segments of the labor market.
Reputational risk, not a crisis
Economists say the immediate impact of grey-listing is mostly reputational. Countries that move quickly to implement reforms usually get off the list in two to three years. For Kuwait, the designation serves as both a warning and an opportunity: more scrutiny in the short term, but a chance to boost its financial credibility if it follows through on reforms.



