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What Is Beneficial Ownership Information?

Updated on
17 May 2026
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02 February, 2021

Understanding compliance within financial services demands familiarity with transparency regulations, and few areas have changed as swiftly as beneficial ownership information. A company’s beneficial ownership details are vital for transparency and regulatory adherence, as they pinpoint the individuals who ultimately own or control the business. Centralised registers of beneficial ownership information enable law enforcement to swiftly identify individuals behind suspicious entities during investigations. Whether managing a wealth management firm, overseeing compliance at a bank, or handling international client relationships, comprehending what BOI entails and who must report it is crucial for regulatory compliance.

This guide provides a comprehensive overview of beneficial ownership information, covering legal definitions under the Corporate Transparency Act, which introduces a federal BOI reporting requirement affecting over 30 million businesses starting January 1, 2024, alongside practical filing obligations and how platforms like InvestGlass assist institutions in efficiently managing this data. BOI reporting empowers financial institutions to conduct precise customer due diligence, mitigating risks linked to anonymous shell companies. Regulatory bodies such as the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) collect beneficial ownership information to enhance transparency and safeguard the financial system.

Quick answer: what is beneficial ownership information (BOI)?

Beneficial ownership information comprises the personal and identifying details of individuals who ultimately own or control a legal entity, regardless of whether their names appear on public corporate documents. Simply put, it reveals who truly controls a company, trust, or similar entity.

Under the U.S. Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), BOI generally includes:

·       Individuals owning or controlling at least 25% of a reporting company’s ownership interests

·       Individuals exercising substantial control over a company, such as senior officers or those with authority over major decisions

·       Data such as full legal name, date of birth, residential street address, and identification document details (e.g., passport or driver’s licence)

This information is submitted to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) via its secure filing system. The objective is to combat money laundering, terrorism financing, and other illicit activities enabled by opaque ownership structures.

Important update for 2025: Following FinCEN’s interim final rule in March 2025, most domestic reporting companies formed under U.S. state or tribal law, and many U.S. beneficial owners, are exempt from BOI reporting. However, foreign reporting companies registered to operate in the U.S. remain obligated to file.

For financial institutions and regulated firms, BOI is central to KYC, onboarding, and ongoing compliance. Platforms such as InvestGlass enable compliance teams to capture, securely store, and utilise this data within a unified, auditable system, centralising everything from identification images to risk assessments.

How beneficial ownership information is defined under the Corporate Transparency Act

The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), enacted in 2021 and effective from January 1, 2024, establishes the principal U.S. legal framework for defining and collecting beneficial ownership information, focusing on the reporting company’s ownership interests. Companies must report details about their beneficial owners to FinCEN. The CTA aims to increase transparency in ownership structures and prevent misuse of corporations for illicit activities like money laundering and fraud. Grasping these definitions is essential for any reporting company or institution performing due diligence.

A beneficial owner is an individual who directly or indirectly exercises substantial control over a reporting company or owns or controls at least 25% of its ownership interests.

Two key criteria for beneficial ownership

Under the CTA, an individual qualifies as a beneficial owner if they meet either of these conditions:

Criterion

Description

Ownership threshold

The individual owns or controls at least 25% of the ownership interests of the reporting company

Substantial control

The individual exercises substantial control over the company, irrespective of ownership percentage

The “or” is important: meeting one criterion suffices to be a beneficial owner.

What counts as ownership interests?

The definition is broad and includes:

·       Equity, stock, or similar instruments

·       Membership interests in limited liability companies

·       Profit or capital interests

·       Convertible instruments and warrants

·       Options to buy or sell ownership interests

·       Any arrangement establishing ownership, including indirect ownership via holding companies, trusts, or partnerships

Who exercises substantial control?

Substantial control covers individuals with decision-making authority beyond equity holders, such as:

·       Chief executive, financial, or operating officers

·       Managing directors or general counsel

·       Senior officers with authority over significant strategic or operational decisions

·       Individuals with veto power over major company matters, even with less than 25% equity

FinCEN’s detailed rules at 31 CFR § 1010.380 provide precise criteria and examples for compliance teams to review. Definitions may vary by jurisdiction; the U.S. CTA framework differs from EU AML directives and Swiss AML rules, which is important for institutions managing multi-jurisdictional compliance with tools like InvestGlass.

Why beneficial ownership information matters for businesses and regulators

Beneficial ownership information serves to illuminate the true beneficiaries of corporate activities. By disclosing who benefits from a company, BOI helps prevent misuse of legal entities for illicit purposes and promotes a healthier financial system.

A company’s beneficial ownership information is vital for regulatory compliance, transparency, and anti-money laundering efforts, enabling authorities and financial institutions to identify and monitor those who control or benefit from a business.

Combating financial crime

BOI is a key tool against:

·       Money laundering and terrorist financing

·       Sanctions evasion and proliferation financing

·       Tax evasion and corruption

·       Drug trafficking and organised crime

Without transparency, criminals exploit anonymous shell companies to move illicit funds, conceal assets, or commit fraud, especially in sectors like banking, real estate, trade finance, and cross-border wealth management.

Supporting AML/CFT compliance

For financial institutions, BOI reporting underpins:

·       Customer due diligence during onboarding

·       Enhanced due diligence for high-risk clients

·       Sanctions screening and PEP assessments

·       Ongoing monitoring and KYC reviews

Accurate, current beneficial ownership information enables compliance officers to identify owners, evaluate risk, and address potential issues proactively.

How regulators use BOI

Government agencies utilise BOI for:

·       Investigations and intelligence (FinCEN)

·       Sanctions enforcement (OFAC)

·       Law enforcement at state and local levels

·       National security by certain foreign officials

·       Licensing, contracts, and export permits

Third-party risk management

BOI also supports corporate risk management by helping companies:

·       Verify business partners’ legitimacy

·       Screen for sanctions and reputational risks

·       Understand control structures before agreements

InvestGlass offers a centralised CRM platform for private banks and financial institutions where relationship managers, compliance officers, and operations teams access BOI, risk ratings, and documentation from a single auditable source, eliminating silos and ensuring consistency.

Who must report beneficial ownership information, and who is exempt?

BOI reporting obligations have evolved, especially after FinCEN’s March 2025 interim final rule. Entities should consult current guidance to verify their status.

Entities initially covered (January 2024)

Initially, most corporations, LLCs, and similar entities created or registered in the U.S. were subject to BOI reporting, affecting over 30 million entities. New entities had specific filing deadlines depending on their formation date.

Exempt entity types

The CTA exempts 23 categories, including:

Exemption Category

Examples

Regulated financial institutions

Banks, credit unions, insurance companies, SEC-registered investment advisors

Large operating companies

Entities with 20+ full-time employees, a physical U.S. office, and over $5 million in U.S. gross receipts

Publicly traded companies meeting SEC reporting requirements

Companies subject to extensive disclosure

Government entities

Federal, state, or local government bodies

Certain nonprofits

Tax-exempt organisations under specific IRS sections

Entities reporting under other federal frameworks

Those with similar beneficial ownership disclosure obligations

The full exemption list is in 31 CFR § 1010.380(c)(2).

The March 2025 update

The interim final rule exempted:

·       Domestic reporting companies formed under U.S. state or tribal laws

·       U.S. persons identified as beneficial owners

Foreign reporting companies remain subject to BOI reporting. Compliance teams should assess applicability carefully, ideally using systems like InvestGlass.

What information is included in a beneficial ownership information report?

BOI reports to FinCEN include:

Company information

·       Legal name

·       Trade names or DBAs

·       Principal business address

·       Jurisdiction of formation or registration

·       Taxpayer identification number (or foreign equivalent)

Beneficial owner information

For each beneficial owner:

·       Full legal name and date of birth

·       Residential street address (not a P.O. box)

·       Unique identifying number from an ID document (passport, driver’s licence, state ID)

·       An image of the ID document

Company applicant information

For entities created after January 1, 2024, the individual(s) responsible for filing formation documents must be reported, with similar personal details. Business addresses may be acceptable for professional filers.

Filing types and updates

Reports can be initial filings, corrections, or updates. Material changes require filing within set timeframes, typically 30 days from notice.

InvestGlass supports secure storage of supporting documents, audit trails, and approval workflows.

When and how entities file beneficial ownership information with FinCEN

BOI filing is electronic via FinCEN’s secure portal, with no fee.

Filing deadlines

Entity Type

Deadline

Entities created before Jan 1, 2024

January 1, 2025

Entities created in 2024

90 days from notice of formation

Reporting companies registered after Jan 2024

30-90 days depending on circumstances

Post-March 2025:

·       Foreign companies received a 30-day extension

·       Foreign entities registering in the U.S. must file within 30 days of registration

·       Domestic companies and U.S. beneficial owners no longer file

Filing methods

Options include web-based forms or PDF uploads via FinCEN’s official site.

Beware of phishing scams; FinCEN does not request payment for filings or send unsolicited penalty notices.

Reporting frequency

No annual reports are required; only initial filings and updates for material changes.

InvestGlass’s compliance automation helps track deadlines and trigger alerts.

BOI filed with FinCEN is confidential and not publicly accessible.

Access is limited to:

Authorized Group

Purpose

Federal law enforcement

National security, intelligence, criminal investigations

State, local, and tribal officials

Law enforcement activities

Certain foreign officials

National security and law enforcement collaboration

Financial institutions

With customer consent and regulatory conditions

FinCEN employs stringent security measures, including FISMA-compliant cloud infrastructure.

Penalties

Before March 2025, non-compliance could result in civil fines and criminal penalties, including imprisonment.

Currently, enforcement focuses on foreign entities, with domestic companies largely exempt.

How InvestGlass helps manage beneficial ownership information and CTA compliance

Manual BOI management is increasingly impractical for regulated firms. InvestGlass, a Swiss sovereign CRM and automation platform for financial services, supports BOI compliance by:

Digital onboarding and KYC

Configurable workflows collect all required BOI data, securely store ID images, apply jurisdiction-specific rules, and document approval processes, supporting automated KYC verification across client lifecycles.

Swiss data sovereignty

Swiss-hosted cloud or on-premise options ensure data remains within jurisdictional boundaries, aiding confidentiality and regulatory compliance, a model that also underpins InvestGlass CRM for Swiss dental practices.

Automated compliance workflows

Automate approvals, risk assessments, PEP and sanctions screening, and maintain audit trails, while leveraging agentic AI in banking for fraud detection and CX where appropriate.

Role-based access and portfolio visibility

Provide client structure insights while restricting sensitive data access based on roles.

AI-driven monitoring and alerts

Detect ownership changes, trigger KYC reviews, and identify risk patterns.

Key takeaways

·       Beneficial ownership information reveals who truly owns or controls entities

·       The Corporate Transparency Act defines BOI and sets reporting requirements

·       The March 2025 rule exempts most domestic entities but retains foreign company obligations

·       BOI reports include company and individual owner data securely filed with FinCEN

·       Access is restricted to authorised parties under strict confidentiality

·       Financial institutions rely on BOI for due diligence and compliance

·       InvestGlass centralises BOI management within a Swiss-hosted sovereign platform

Conclusion

Understanding beneficial ownership information is essential for regulated institutions to ensure compliance, manage risk, and build trust. While regulations evolve, transparency remains the goal. For cross-border financial firms, efficient operationalisation of BOI requirements is critical, and InvestGlass offers the tools to achieve this within a secure, sovereign infrastructure.

Ready to enhance your BOI compliance? Discover how InvestGlass’s Swiss-hosted CRM and digital onboarding solutions can help your organisation capture, manage, and report beneficial ownership information confidently. Contact InvestGlass to learn more about our compliance automation capabilities.

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