Certified Copy

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Table of Contents

Certified Copy - Quick Overview

  • Meaning: A document certified as a true copy of an original by someone authorised to do so.
  • Why it matters: Certified copy controls reduce identity fraud risk, especially for remote onboarding and higher risk customers.
  • Where the authorised list sits: AML and CTF Rules 2007, Chapter 1, Part 1.2.
  • Practical how to steps: Australian Government guidance explains how referees certify documents, what wording to use, and what details to include.

What is a certified copy

AUSTRAC defines a certified copy as a document certified as a true copy of an original document by someone authorised to do so. AUSTRAC points businesses to Chapter 1, Part 1.2 of the AML and CTF Rules for the list of authorised certifiers.

In plain English, a certified copy is used when you cannot reliably sight the original document yourself, or when your procedures require stronger assurance that the document has not been altered.

Who can certify a certified copy under the AML and CTF Rules

The AML and CTF Rules set out who can certify a document as a certified copy. The list includes, for example, legal practitioners enrolled on the roll, judges, magistrates, justices of the peace, notaries public, police officers, certain Australia Post staff, Australian consular or diplomatic officers, and certain financial services professionals, including qualified members of recognised professional accounting bodies subject to the Rule conditions.

This list is critical because businesses sometimes accept certifications from people who are not authorised for AML and CTF purposes, which weakens the reliability of identity verification.

How to get a certified copy in Australia

Australian Government guidance provides a practical approach to certification. For example, Services Australia describes that the referee should sight the original and the copy, write a certification statement on each copy, sign each copy, and include referee details such as name, address, and phone number. It also describes how to handle multi page documents.

For Tranche 2 businesses, the exact process you adopt should be consistent with your risk assessment and your onboarding model, including whether you onboard customers in person or remotely.

Why certified copy matters in AML and CTF compliance

Certified copy is not a paperwork exercise. It is a control designed to address a specific risk: identity fraud.

Identity fraud supports money laundering because it allows criminals to hide behind false names, stolen documents, or manipulated records. A certified copy process improves integrity by involving a trusted certifier who attests that the copy matches the original.

This becomes more important when your service is high risk, the customer is not physically present, or the transaction is unusually large or complex.

Where Tranche 2 entities will use certified copies

Lawyers, conveyancers, and trust and company service providers

These firms often onboard clients who may not visit the office, including overseas clients. Certified copy processes can be part of a robust remote onboarding framework.

Accountants and tax advisers

Accountants often onboard new entities, directors, and beneficial owners, and may rely on certified identity documents where direct sighting is not practical.

Real estate professionals

Real estate businesses deal with high value transactions and complex funding. Certified copy controls may be used for higher risk customers or where identity documents cannot be sighted directly.

Examples of good and poor certified copy practice

Example 1: Good practice, remote onboarding
A customer sends a passport copy certified by an authorised person. The certification includes the required wording, signature, and referee details. The business records why certified copy was used, links it to the customer risk, and stores it securely.
 
Example 2: Poor practice, unclear certifier
A customer sends a copy stamped by an unverified third party with no clear name, role, or contact details. This is weak evidence and should be rejected or escalated.
 
Example 3: Multi page document
A customer provides a multi page identity extract. The referee certifies the first page and initials the remainder, following government style guidance.

Best practice for Tranche 2 compliance teams

  1. Define when certified copy is required in your procedures, such as remote onboarding, higher risk customers, or where identity documents cannot be sighted.

  2. Use the AML and CTF Rules list to define who is authorised and train staff to spot incorrect certifications.

  3. Adopt a consistent certification standard including wording, signature, date, and certifier contact details, reflecting Australian Government style guidance.

  4. Protect privacy and security by storing certified copies securely, limiting access, and retaining only what is necessary for compliance.

  5. Quality check certified copies as part of onboarding and periodic file reviews, especially during the transition to the reformed regime in 2026.

Common challenges

  • Staff accept certifications that do not meet AML and CTF Rules requirements

  • Certifications missing key details such as name and contact information

  • Multi page documents certified incorrectly

  • Weak record keeping that does not explain why certified copy was required

How Tranche 2 Consultants can help

Tranche 2 Consultants builds certified copy requirements into your end to end onboarding workflow, including document checklists, staff guidance, quality assurance steps, and file note templates that support consistent customer due diligence from day one of regulation.

Final Notes on Certified Copy

Certified copy is one of the simplest controls in the AML and CTF toolkit, yet it prevents many avoidable onboarding failures. Done well, it reduces identity fraud risk and supports strong customer due diligence as Tranche 2 sectors enter the regime in 2026.

“Bookmakers sit at a natural convergence point for cash, speed and anonymity. AUSTRAC’s focus reflects the reality that wagering platforms can be misused as value transfer mechanisms if risk controls are not actively applied.”

Common Questions About Certified Copy

Do we always need a certified copy
No. Use a risk based approach and your documented procedures. Certified copy is most relevant when originals cannot be sighted or risk is higher.
 
Who can certify documents for AML and CTF purposes
The list sits in Chapter 1, Part 1.2 of the AML and CTF Rules. If the certifier is not on the list, treat it as not acceptable unless your legal advice confirms otherwise.
 
When do Tranche 2 obligations start
AUSTRAC states obligations start 1 July 2026 and enrolment opens 31 March 2026.
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