Five Core Components of OFAC Sanctions Compliance

          
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OFAC Five Tips

Building a strong compliance foundation

Following OFAC guidance to strengthen day-to-day compliance decision-making.
OFAC Sanctions Tip Sheet Screenshot

For organizations that fall under Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) regulations, sanctions compliance calls for a complete program approach. OFAC has outlined five core components of effective sanctions compliance:

  1. Management Commitment
  2. Risk Assessment
  3. Internal Controls
  4. Testing and Auditing
  5. Training

Download our tip sheet to see how these components come together and get a practical view of what a strong compliance foundation should include. 

A structured, documented compliance program can help organizations identify risks earlier, support effective controls and strengthen day-to-day compliance decision-making.

Consequences of OFAC sanctions violations

The stakes can be significant. Where sanctions violations occur, OFAC can issue civil monetary penalties that range from thousands of dollars into hundreds of millions, with the final amount influenced by factors such as the value of the underlying transaction, voluntary self-disclosure, whether the conduct is considered egregious and the strength of the compliance program.

Egregious (adjective)
[ih-gree-juhs, -jee-uhs]
extraordinary in some bad way; glaring; flagrant.
www.dictionary.com

OFAC penalty criteria:

  • The “Applicable Schedule Amount” acts as a baseline cap for non-egregious cases – these run from $1,000 to $200,000
  • The “Statutory Maximum”, applied to egregious cases, is “$377,700 or twice the amount of the underlying transaction”* 

In the case of a voluntary self-disclosure, penalty amounts are significantly reduced (typically by half). Once a base penalty is established, OFAC also considers General Factors to determine penalty amounts:

  1. Willful or reckless violation of law
  2. Awareness of conduct at issue
  3. Harm to sanctions program objectives
  4. Individual characteristics
  5. Compliance program
  6. Remedial response
  7. Cooperation with OFAC
  8. Timing of apparent violation in relation to imposition of sanctions
  9. Other enforcement action
  10. Future compliance/deterrence effect
  11. Other relevant factors on a case-by-case basis

Sound complicated? The below offers an illustrative and simplified example of how OFAC determines penalties (for educational purposes only, not accounting for General Factors).

OFAC decision and penalty matrix

Further detail on OFAC decision making and civil monetary penalty amounts is available here.

LexisNexis® Risk Solutions helps organizations operationalize OFAC’s framework with data-driven insights, advanced analytics and scalable screening capabilities.

Our watchlist screening solutions can help you:

  • Streamline customer and transaction screening workflows
  • Ensure adherence to OFAC and other global regulatory requirements
  • Balance compliance mandates with seamless customer acquisition
  • Minimize false positives and operational inefficiencies
  • Enhance the effectiveness of compliance and customer management processes
Contact us to learn how we can help

*For sanctions implemented under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) only. Different statutory maximums may apply, depending on the statute underpinning the sanctions violated.

1U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Introduction to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. U.S. Department of the Treasury, Washington, DC, (June 1, 2026). OFAC Introduction document (PDF)

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