Where is information about the beneficial ownership of a company found?
Latest Update: September 2023
Beneficial Ownership
The question of who is behind a company and who is the ‘beneficial owner’ has become increasingly important in recent years for combating terrorist financing and eradicating money laundering together with their predicate offences, such as tax law violations. The European Union is setting the framework with their Money Laundering Directive and, most recently, with the amending Directive to the 4th EU Money Laundering Directive (Directive [EU] 2018/843), which is being implemented by the member states.
The beneficial owners of companies are natural persons who ultimately own a company or control it, and/or natural persons on whose initiative a transaction1 is ultimately carried out or a business relationship is ultimately founded (cf. § 3 (1) GwG (Money Laundering Act)). Improved accessibility to this information is intended to facilitate the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing.
To make it easier to identify PePs, each EU member state and the European Commission update a list in accordance with Article 1 No. 13 of the amending Directive to the 4th EU Money Laundering Directive (Directive [EU] 2018/843) in which the precise functions are stated that are to be considered as important public offices as defined by the Directive. In Germany, the Federal Ministry of Finance is responsible for drawing up and updating the list and sending it to the European Commission. The European Commission combines the EU member states’ lists and their own list and publishes a joint list.
German Transparency Register
In Germany, beneficial owners can be found in the transparency register, which is accessible via an Internet portal. A transparency register was established on 26 June 2017 as part of the implementation of the 4th Money Laundering Directive (EU) 2015/849 of 20 May 2015. The register is a catch-all register that holds data on beneficial owners unless this data is already available in other publicly accessible registers. This means that information on beneficial owners from already-existing, publicly-accessible electronic registers (see above) could be retrieved from the transparency register. Besides, the register also provides information in those cases where the beneficial owners cannot be determined from other registers so that they have to be notified immediately to the transparency register.
The Law on Networking transparency registers in Europe promulgated on 30 June 2021 and the implementation of Directive (EU) 2019/1153 of the European Parliament and the Council dated 20 June 2019 on the use of financial information for combating money laundering, financing terrorism and other serious crimes (transparency register and Financial Information Act) transformed the transparency register from a catch-all register into a full register. This means that after the law came into force on 1 August 2021 all legal entities were required to immediately notify their beneficial owners to the registry office of the transparency register for entry. This obligation is subject to a transitional period, which expired by 31 December 2022 at the latest, depending on the form of legal entity. From 1 January 2023 an entry on beneficial owners should be available in digital form in the transparency register for all German companies and other legal entities. The accuracy of the data and compliance with the registration obligations is checked by the Federal Office of Administration (the competent fining authority) and also by the discrepancy reports from persons subject to anti-money laundering obligations and authorities. Accordingly, the parties subject to § 23a of the German Money Laundering Act (GwG) and the authorities are to report without delay any discrepancies they may discover between the information on the beneficial owners reflected in the transparency register and the information and knowledge they have on the beneficial owners.
Information on beneficial owners in the Transparency Register
The first name and surname of the beneficial owner, his or her date of birth, place of residence, country of residence, extent of the economic interest and all nationalities are recorded.
Management of the Transparency Register
The transparency register is operated by the Bundesanzeiger Verlag GmbH as an appointed authority. In principle, the associations and legal entities in Germany mentioned in § 20 and § 21 GwG are required to report the current information on the beneficial owner in electronic form to the transparency register. The registry office carries out a sense check of the data notified when making the entry, § 18 (3) GwG. The content of the data notified is checked if a discrepancy report has been submitted.
Where the fine exceeds an amount of €200, legally binding and indisputable decisions on fines are published on the BVA website.2
Obtaining information from the Transparency Register
Data in the transparency register is not available in the format of open data. If interested parties wish to obtain information from the transparency register, they need to complete a one-time registration form on the website www.transparenzregister.de. The individual registration steps are explained in greater detail in the brief guide “Einsichtnahme in das Transparenzregister für Mitglieder der Öffentlichkeit” (How members of the public can obtain information from the transparency register).
Where the beneficial owner has legitimate interests that require protection, the office that operates the register can still restrict inspection of the transparency register. The beneficial owners must support this with facts to substantiate why obtaining information from the register would put them at risk of becoming victims of certain crimes (e. g. blackmail) (§ 23(2) GwG). As of 9 July 2021, restrictions were set for 2,278. From 2021 onwards, the registry office will produce annual statistics on the number of limitations granted and the reasons for the limitations, publish these on its website under downloads (direct link to the statistics in PDF format) and send it to the European Commission (see § 23(2) last sentence GwG latest version).
To cover the administrative cost, a fee of €1.65 is due for each document that is inspected (see list of fees in the special fees scale for the transparency register of the Federal Ministry of Finance dated 12 November 2021, Transparenzregistergebührenverordnung [TrGebV] (transparency register fees scale)). The fees charged depend on the respective register but they are approximately the same as the fees incurred for inspecting the Transparency Register.
From 1 January 2021 the law enforcement authorities and the central unit for investigating financial trans- actions (Financial Intelligence Unit, FIU) has been given automated access to all data in the transparency register within the context of fulfilling their duties (cf. § 26a GwG). In future, this option will be extended to the supervisory authorities, the Federal Central Tax Office, the local tax authorities and the Office for the Protection of the Constitution at federal and State level as a result of the Transparency Register and Financial Information Act.
EU member states are currently working with the EU Commission to network European transparency regis- ters pursuant to Art. 30 ff. of the amending Directive to the 4th EU Money Laundering Directive (Directive [EU] 2018/843). The result of this networking will be access to the transparency registers of all member states via a shared European platform (“BORIS”).
1 The term “transaction” here means all acts which have the purpose or the effect of a monetary movement or other asset movement.
2 Office of Administration (2022): Decisions on fines (transparency register). URL: https://www.bva.bund.de/DE/Das-BVA/Aufgaben/T/Transparenz- register/Bussgeldentscheidungen/bussgeldentscheidungen_node.html [Accessed on 29 November 2022].