Australia's long-delayed crackdown on illicit money flowing through residential property takes effect tomorrow, with sweeping new obligations applying to real estate agents, lawyers, accountants, and conveyancers from 1 July.
The reforms extend anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing coverage to real estate agents, conveyancers, lawyers and accountants for the first time, requiring them to verify client identities, assess the source of funds and report suspicious activity to financial crimes agency AUSTRAC.
The rules bring the real estate sector into line with compliance standards banks and financial planners have long been subject to — though mortgage brokers, already regulated as Australian Credit Licence holders under Tranche 1, take on no new obligations of their own.
Lee Bailie from property and legal technology provider InfoTrack described the significance plainly.
"Every Australian buying or selling a home will need to demonstrate who they are and where their money comes from. That is not a minor administrative change. It is the most significant reform to how property transactions are conducted in a generation," Bailie told Yahoo Finance.
The immediate practical effect is more documentation at settlement. Bailie framed it as short-term friction for long-term gain.
"In the short term, buyers and sellers can expect to provide more documentation than they are used to. The longer-term benefit is a property market with greater integrity, where home prices are driven by genuine demand, not illicit money," he said.
Ray White compliance manager Shaun Doyle noted that for most standard transactions the impact will be limited to straightforward identity checks, with more complex cases — such as cash purchases from opaque sources — more likely to trigger AUSTRAC referrals.
For brokers managing tight settlement timelines, industry groups have flagged a practical risk in the short term. Additional identity checks and financial verification procedures could increase the time needed to process contracts and settlements, and some agencies and law firms may pass on higher compliance costs through increased professional fees as they stand up new processes.
The scale of what those processes are designed to address is significant.
Bailie has previously noted the direct market consequence of illicit money in property.
"There is no doubt that does cause upward pressure on the housing market,” he said. “Having this additional pressure coming from criminal activity, I think it's driving prices up and reducing stock that should be available for everyday Australians."
The reforms arrive as Australia's major lenders are conducting internal investigations into suspected mortgage fraud, with sector-wide reviews estimating $4 billion in suspect loans — a problem authorities say extends well beyond any single lender or introducer channel. NAB has called for a national economic crime strategy to address the problem at a systemic level.
The scale reflects a historically poor transparency record. Transparency International's Opacity in Real Estate Ownership index ranked Australia last out of 24 jurisdictions in 2025 — behind Russia, China, and Panama — on its ability to shield its property market from illicit funds.
The reputational stakes extend beyond rankings. Australia was also one of only a handful of countries yet to bring these professions under AML rules — a gap that risked a Financial Action Task Force grey-listing later this year, with serious consequences for the integrity of the country's financial system.
For brokers, the practical implication is clear: clients should be prepared for additional identity and source-of-funds checks at the conveyancing stage. Pre-approval conversations are a natural moment to flag what documentation will be required before settlement.
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