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Adverse Media Screening Explained – 2025 Beginner Guide
Adverse media screening (also called negative news screening) is a critical part of KYC and AML. It helps financial institutions identify customers who may be linked to fraud, corruption, money laundering, or other criminal activities.
This 2025 beginner guide explains what adverse media is, why it matters, how screening works, and how it links to KYC, AML, sanctions, and EDD.
Short answer:
Adverse media screening checks for negative news about customers so banks can spot hidden financial crime risks early.
What Is Adverse Media Screening?
Adverse media screening is the process of searching for negative information about a customer or business in news sources, public records, and databases.
The goal is to identify links to crime, regulatory action, sanctions, or reputational risk before or during a business relationship.
Types of Adverse Media (2025)
- Fraud and embezzlement
- Bribery and corruption
- Tax evasion
- Money laundering allegations
- Sanctions or export control violations
- Terrorism or organized crime links
- Regulatory fines or enforcement actions
- Serious civil or criminal cases
Why Is Adverse Media Important in KYC & AML?
- Reveals risk that is not visible in documents
- Helps detect criminal history or ongoing cases
- Supports risk-based decision-making
- Triggers Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD)
- Protects institution from reputational damage
How Adverse Media Screening Works (Simple Steps)
- Collect customer name and key identifiers
- Search across news databases, search engines, and vendor tools
- Identify relevant negative articles or reports
- Check if it is the same person/entity (name match, location, age, company, etc.)
- Assess severity and recency of the news
- Update customer risk rating and decide CDD vs EDD
- Document evidence and store in the KYC file
How Adverse Media Affects Risk Rating
| Scenario | Impact on Risk |
|---|---|
| Old, low-level civil case | Slight increase, monitor only |
| Recent fraud allegation | Increase risk, consider EDD |
| Confirmed money laundering case | High risk, likely decline or exit |
Adverse Media Red Flags (2025)
- Multiple articles linking customer to fraud or scams
- Ongoing criminal investigation
- Links to organized crime networks
- Regulatory enforcement actions or fines
- News linking customer to corruption or bribery
- Repeated mention in financial crime reporting
Adverse Media vs Sanctions vs PEP – Quick Comparison
| Type | Source | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Sanctions | Official government lists | Block / freeze / report |
| PEP | PEP databases / public records | EDD + enhanced monitoring |
| Adverse Media | News, media, public sources | Increase risk, consider EDD or exit |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Is adverse media screening mandatory?
It is strongly expected by regulators as part of a risk-based approach, especially for high-risk customers.
How often should adverse media be checked?
At onboarding and periodically, with more frequent checks for high-risk customers.
What if adverse media is old?
Age, severity, and outcome matter. Very old, minor cases may have limited impact if no recent issues exist.
Want Real-World Adverse Media Training?
Learn adverse media techniques, sanctions, PEP checks, EDD, and financial crime frameworks inside GO-AKS KYC Certification, G-CAMO, and G-CAMI.
Explore Certifications →You may also like:
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