FinCEN ·

FinCEN expands Section 314(b) safe harbour to cover real-time fraud information sharing

AML teams at BSA-regulated institutions can share fraud indicators in real time under the 314(b) safe harbour only if registered and verifying the counterpart is a registrant

Change
On 12 June 2026 the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued an updated Section 314(b) Fact Sheet, replacing its December 2020 guidance, clarifying that financial institutions may share information in real time and may share fraud-related information under the safe harbour because fraud offences are specified unlawful activities for money laundering.
Why it matters
The updated fact sheet expands the December 2020 version on two points: information sharing under section 314(b) may occur in real time, and fraud-related information is within scope because fraud offences are specified unlawful activities for money laundering, so an institution need not trace specific fraud proceeds to rely on the safe harbour. A registered participant may also share with another registered participant absent any existing relationship to the subject. The safe harbour remains conditional: registration via the FI Portal, verification that the counterpart is a registrant, confidentiality safeguards, and AML/CFT-only use. The SAR-disclosure prohibition is unchanged; joint SARs remain permitted.
Implications
  • To rely on the section 314(b) safe harbour for sharing fraud or other SUA-related information, a BSA AML-program institution (banks, casinos and card clubs, money services businesses, brokers or dealers in securities, mutual funds, insurance companies, futures commission merchants and introducing brokers, dealers in precious metals or stones, credit card system operators, loan or finance companies, and housing GSEs) must register through FinCEN's FI Portal — information shared without registration falls outside the safe harbour.
  • Before sharing, the institution must take reasonable steps to verify the counterpart is also a 314(b) registrant — sharing with a non-registrant removes the liability protection for that exchange.
  • The institution must maintain procedures to safeguard the confidentiality of shared information and use it only for identifying or reporting money laundering or terrorist financing (including fraud as an SUA) and related account or transaction decisions, and must not disclose a SAR or reveal its existence — failing the use-and-security conditions removes the safe harbour and risks breaching SAR confidentiality rules.
Who is affected
  • AML compliance teams at BSA AML-program financial institutions participating in or registering for section 314(b)
  • Information-security and BSA-reporting teams at section 314(b) registrants responsible for confidentiality safeguards and SAR handling
View on FinCEN
Got Questions?

Ask what this change means — grounded in this brief. Source linked for final checks.

Clarify™ · Grounded, not generic

Why not a general AI assistant?

A general assistant will answer almost anything — including beyond what it actually knows, which is where drift and hallucination come from. Ask it the same question twice and you can get two different answers — no good when you need a record you can stand behind.

Clarify™ works differently. It answers only from the specific brief in front of you and its cited primary source. Ask something the brief doesn’t cover and it says so, rather than inventing an answer — and the same question returns a consistent, grounded answer every time. The trade-off is deliberate: narrower, but defensible enough to act on.

Clarify with AI — Pro only

You asked:

Clarify turns any brief into answers specific to your role and exposure.

Pro includes

Implications — what this change may force you to review
Who is affected — which people, workflows, or obligations are touched
What to watch — dates, deadlines, and triggers that matter next
Real-time alerts — delivered when a decision-forcing change is published
Clarify with AI — ask what this change means for you

$29/month · Founding rate, locked for life. Cancel anytime.

Create a free account to keep clarifying

You asked:

You've used your free guest questions for now. A free account gives you more every month and saves your history — or start a Pro trial for unlimited Clarify and real-time alerts.

Pro includes

Implications — what this change may force you to review
Who is affected — which people, workflows, or obligations are touched
What to watch — dates, deadlines, and triggers that matter next
Real-time alerts — delivered when a decision-forcing change is published
Clarify with AI — ask what this change means for you

Free account: no card, ever. Pro trial: $29/month after 14 days, no card to start, cancel anytime.

Awareness was never the problem. Translation is.

Your team doesn't miss the change — it loses hours turning a 60-page regulator notice into “what do we actually do.” OwlBrief delivers that as a sourced, decision-ready brief the moment a change publishes.

Get the next brief free →
Similar briefs