What Compliance Teams Need to Know About the January 2026 Change
On Wednesday, 28 January 2026, the UK government implemented a significant change to how sanctions designations are published and maintained. UK sanctions designations are now issued through a single authoritative source, the UK Sanctions List, published by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
This update simplifies the UK sanctions framework but also introduces important operational implications for financial institutions and other regulated entities.
What Has Changed
Historically, UK sanctions designations were accessed primarily through the Consolidated List of Asset Freeze Targets, published for HM Treasury by the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation.
As of 28 January 2026:
• UK sanctions designations are now only detailed in the UK Sanctions List (UKSL)
• The Consolidated List of Asset Freeze Targets is no longer being updated
• The Consolidated List remains available for reference purposes only on its legacy page
The UK Sanctions List is now the single source of truth for UK sanctions designations.
What Is the UK Sanctions List
The UK Sanctions List is a consolidated publication maintained by the FCDO that brings together all UK sanctions designations across regimes. It includes individuals, entities, and ships subject to UK sanctions measures such as asset freezes, travel bans, and other restrictions.
By centralizing sanctions designations, the UK government aims to improve clarity, consistency, and accessibility for sanctions compliance.
Why the Change Matters for Sanctions Compliance
This shift has direct implications for how institutions manage sanctions screening and controls.
Single Authoritative Source
Compliance teams must now ensure that sanctions screening tools, internal lists, and escalation processes are aligned exclusively to the UK Sanctions List. Continued reliance on the Consolidated List as an operational source creates a risk of outdated or incomplete screening.
Screening and System Updates
Institutions should confirm that:
• Sanctions screening systems are ingesting the UK Sanctions List
• Any automated feeds previously linked to the Consolidated List have been retired
• Internal procedures reflect the new source of UK sanctions designations
Failure to update systems promptly may expose firms to sanctions breaches and regulatory criticism.
Governance and Oversight Considerations
From a governance perspective, the move to a single list reinforces the importance of:
• Clear ownership of sanctions list management
• Documented change management processes
• Ongoing monitoring of government updates and publications
Boards and senior management should be satisfied that sanctions controls remain current and effective following the change.
Relationship Between the FCDO and OFSI
While OFSI remains responsible for implementation, licensing, and enforcement of UK financial sanctions, the publication of designations now sits solely with the FCDO via the UK Sanctions List.
This separation underscores the need for compliance teams to understand not just who enforces sanctions, but where authoritative designation data originates.
Practical Next Steps for Compliance Teams
In response to this update, institutions should:
• Update sanctions policies and procedures to reference the UK Sanctions List
• Validate sanctions screening vendor configurations
• Retain the Consolidated List only for historical or audit reference
• Train relevant staff on the change and its implications
These steps help demonstrate proactive compliance and regulatory awareness.