A regulatory sandbox is a controlled environment where businesses can test innovative products, services, or business models under relaxed regulatory requirements while ensuring consumer protection and risk management. In an era where innovation in constant, do regulatory sandboxes represent a vital step forward?
According to RelyComply, regulatory sandboxes are a key recommendation in the Wolfsberg Group guidance on Monitoring Suspicious Activity, and the company highlights its hardly a surprise since the idea’s introduction in the UK in the past decade.
The firm said, “We see it as a hugely influential method of innovating compliance technology within financial services: bringing together platform experts and compliance teams to consistently iterate the most effective, compliant and user-centric workflows without the risk of breakage, downtime or knowledge of coding intricacies.”
The company outlined that there are multiple benefits to this cross-collaborative approach. On one hand, it can boost long-term partnerships between financial institutions and RegTech providers, sharing each other’s expertise to make best-in-class solutions specific to compliance use cases.
“This could entail simplifying data storage from legacy systems to a unified source of truth for banks. For more specific financial services like PSPs or insurtechs, models can be tested before launching an innovative product (such as an AI-driven personalisation solution),” said RelyComply.
“However, sandboxes are also brilliant for AML/KYC systems,” RelyComply continued. “They grant control for practitioners to test new operations following regulatory requirements or in line with bespoke risk policies, all before they’re rolled out in go-live.
“No enforcement risks are threatened, and audit trails or version controls grant evidence of iterative AML success using anonymous datasets that do not compromise customer information. Regulators can be informed of how emerging digital tools assist compliance in the sectors they’re designed for, boosting shared learning that’s key to regulatory standardisation.”
However, the South African RegTech firm believes that the next stage of sandbox innovation will involve a greater take-up.
“The Monetary Authority of Singapore has already used the concept to drive fintech development. The UAE boosted their regulatory measures with sandboxes, eventually being removed from FATF’s greylist. Further success relies on it becoming a broader initiative, with all financial players continuously learning from businesses or regions that have successfully adjusted their platforms to comply with global AML standards,” said the firm.
RelyComply concluded by highlighting that a sandbox is not just about throwing out experimental UX ideas as crash-test dummies, as the groundbreaking innovations that come from these risk-free environments can help adopt frameworks positively influencing the whole financial system.
Catalysts for innovation
In the view of Annalisa Camarillo, chief communications officer and head of marketing at Quantifind, regulatory sandboxes have emerged as powerful catalysts for innovation in financial compliance, enabling FinTechs, RegTechs and financial institutions to test new solutions in a controlled environment.
She explained that Quantifind believes there are three key innovation impacts. Firstly, around accelerated AI and ML adoption. “Sandboxes allow firms to deploy AI-driven risk models, test explainability, and fine-tune compliance automation—without regulatory penalties. This fosters more agile, data-driven compliance strategies that can scale across global markets”
Secondly, it strengthens collaboration between FinTechs and regulators. She said, “Sandboxes enable regulators to understand new compliance technologies first-hand, ensuring more effective and realistic regulatory frameworks. This leads to faster adoption of AI in areas like sanctions screening, KYC and transaction monitoring.
The third innovation impact centers around increased investment and market entry for RegTech solutions. “Companies that successfully pass sandbox evaluations gain credibility, leading to faster regulatory approvals and increased investor confidence. This reduces barriers for RegTech startups looking to introduce AI-driven compliance solutions,” she explained.
On the question of whether sandboxes become more popular, Camarillo completely agrees with this premise.
She said, “As regulators recognize the value of controlled testing, we expect more jurisdictions to launch AI-focused regulatory sandboxes, ensuring that financial crime compliance keeps pace with evolving risks and innovations. In the long run, regulatory sandboxes will become a standard mechanism for AI validation, shaping the future of financial crime detection, fraud prevention, and risk intelligence.”
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