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Which Jurisdictions Require FI Supervision for CRS?

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One of the most misunderstood aspects of CRS is whether a Financial Institution (FI) must be regulated or supervised to have reporting obligations. While the OECD framework does not require supervision, some jurisdictions initially adopted stricter interpretations.

In this episode, we explain how different countries approached this issue—and where things stand today.

🌍 The OECD Position

Under the CRS developed by the

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development:

• FI status is based on activity, not regulation

• Supervision may be relevant—but is not determinative

• Unregulated entities can still be Reporting Financial Institutions

This principle led to pushback against jurisdictions that tried to impose additional supervision requirements.

🇳🇱 🇱🇺 Netherlands & Luxembourg (Historical Position)

Both the Netherlands and Luxembourg initially:

• Required certain FIs—particularly investment entities—to be regulated or supervised

• Limited CRS reporting obligations to supervised entities

However:

• This approach conflicted with OECD guidance

• Both jurisdictions removed the supervision requirement under OECD pressure

🇨🇦 Canada: A Unique Approach

Today, Canada stands out as the only jurisdiction with a structured listing requirement.

In Canada:

• An entity must qualify as a Canadian Financial Institution

• It must be recognised (i.e., included within the Canadian framework of FIs)

• Only then can it be a Reporting Financial Institution

🧾 Canada’s Three-Step Test

To determine CRS reporting obligations in Canada:

1️⃣ Is the Entity a Financial Institution?

Does it qualify as:

• Depositary Institution

• Custodial Institution

• Investment Entity

• Specified Insurance Company

2️⃣ Is It a Canadian FI?

The entity must fall within the definition of a Canadian Financial Institution, based on residence and regulatory framework.

3️⃣ Is It a Reporting FI?

Finally, determine whether:

• The entity has reporting obligations

• Or qualifies as a non-reporting FI under exclusions

⚖️ Why This Matters

The Canadian approach introduces an additional layer:

• Not all FIs automatically become reporting FIs

• Local classification and recognition matter

By contrast, most CRS jurisdictions follow the OECD model more directly:

• If it meets the definition, it is generally an FI

• No supervision requirement applies

🎯 Key Takeaway

• CRS does not require Financial Institutions to be regulated

• The Netherlands and Luxembourg briefly diverged—but aligned with OECD guidance

• Canada applies a more structured, jurisdiction-specific approach

• FI classification and reporting obligations remain jurisdiction-dependent in practice

Understanding local implementation is just as important as understanding the CRS itself.

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