Regulatory Inspections Have Become Far More Than a Compliance Checklist
Many firms approach regulatory inspections believing that the review will focus primarily on policies, procedures, and regulatory submissions.
In reality, modern regulatory inspections are increasingly focused on one fundamental question:
Can the firm demonstrate that its governance, risk, and compliance framework is operating effectively in practice?
Across the UAE’s regulatory landscape, supervisors are placing greater emphasis on evidence, accountability, and operational effectiveness rather than documentation alone.
The firms that perform well during inspections are rarely those with the largest policy manuals.
They are typically the firms that can clearly demonstrate how governance, risk management, and compliance operate on a day-to-day basis.
Governance Evidence Matters More Than Governance Statements
One of the most common misconceptions among regulated firms is that governance can be demonstrated simply through policies and organisational charts.
Regulators increasingly expect firms to provide evidence that governance arrangements are functioning effectively in practice.
This includes evidence of:
- Active board and committee oversight
• Effective challenge and decision-making
• Escalation of material issues
• Risk management discussions and actions
• Management accountability
• Follow-up on identified weaknesses
• Oversight of outsourced functions
A governance framework is only as strong as the evidence supporting its operation.
Regulators increasingly focus on what was discussed, what decisions were made, who approved them, and how issues were subsequently managed.
Audit Trails Tell the Real Story
During inspections, regulators often place significant emphasis on audit trails.
Policies may describe how a process should work, but audit trails demonstrate what actually happened.
Regulators frequently review evidence relating to:
- Customer onboarding decisions
• Risk assessments and approvals
• Compliance reviews
• Transaction monitoring investigations
• Escalation processes
• Committee decisions
• Incident management activities
• Remediation actions
Where audit trails are incomplete, inconsistent, or difficult to retrieve, regulators may question the effectiveness of underlying controls.
Good governance is not only about making decisions. It is about being able to evidence those decisions when challenged.
Management Information Is Under Increasing Scrutiny
Another area receiving growing regulatory attention is Management Information (MI) reporting.
Regulators increasingly expect boards and senior management to receive meaningful information that enables effective oversight and decision-making.
Effective MI should help leadership understand:
- Key compliance risks
• Financial crime exposures
• Customer risk trends
• Control weaknesses
• Operational incidents
• Regulatory breaches
• Emerging risks and vulnerabilities
• Remediation progress
Poor-quality reporting can create significant concerns regarding whether management is adequately informed and exercising appropriate oversight.
If leadership cannot clearly understand the firm’s risks, regulators may question whether those risks are being managed effectively.
Risk Ownership Must Be Clearly Demonstrated
One of the most common weaknesses identified during inspections is uncertainty regarding risk ownership.
Regulators increasingly expect firms to demonstrate that risks are assigned, monitored, and managed by clearly accountable individuals. This includes clarity around:
- Business ownership of risks
• Compliance responsibilities
• Escalation responsibilities
• Control ownership
• Committee oversight responsibilities
• Senior management accountability
Where ownership is unclear, accountability becomes difficult to establish, and control effectiveness may suffer as a result.
A strong governance framework requires clear lines of responsibility throughout the organisation.
Staff Awareness Is a Key Indicator of Compliance Culture
Regulatory inspections increasingly extend beyond policies and senior management interviews.
Regulators often seek to understand whether employees throughout the organisation understand their responsibilities and can apply policies in practice. This may include assessing:
- AML awareness
• Regulatory obligations
• Escalation procedures
• Risk management responsibilities
• Customer due diligence requirements
• Incident reporting processes
• Conduct and ethics expectations
A policy that employees do not understand or cannot apply effectively offers little regulatory value.
Staff awareness has become an important indicator of an organisation’s compliance culture and governance maturity.
Documentation Gaps Continue to Be a Major Regulatory Concern
Even firms with generally strong governance frameworks can encounter difficulties during inspections because of documentation weaknesses. Common gaps include:
- Missing evidence of approvals
• Incomplete committee minutes
• Weak risk assessments
• Insufficient monitoring records
• Inadequate remediation tracking
• Missing escalation documentation
• Poor record retention practices
In many cases, regulators do not simply assess whether activities occurred. They assess whether firms can demonstrate that they occurred. If evidence cannot be produced, regulators may conclude that controls were not operating effectively.
The Question Every Firm Should Be Prepared to Answer
At the heart of most regulatory inspections lies a simple but powerful question:
Can you demonstrate effectiveness?
Regulators increasingly expect firms to move beyond policy compliance and demonstrate that governance, risk management, compliance, and operational controls are functioning as intended.
This requires evidence, accountability, documentation, oversight, and a culture of continuous monitoring and improvement.
Firms that can clearly demonstrate effectiveness are typically better positioned to navigate inspections successfully and build long-term regulatory credibility.
Final Thoughts
As regulatory expectations continue to evolve across the UAE, inspections are becoming increasingly focused on outcomes rather than documentation alone. Policies remain important, but they are only the starting point.
The real test is whether firms can evidence effective governance, clear accountability, strong risk management, informed decision-making, and a strong compliance culture.
At Complyport UAE, we help regulated firms strengthen governance frameworks, prepare for regulatory inspections, identify control weaknesses, and build evidence-based compliance programmes that stand up to regulatory scrutiny.





