The Corporate Transparency Act passed Congress in 2021 with rare bipartisan agreement that anonymous shell companies were a scandal. Three years later, the law was tied up in federal courts, partially enjoined, repeatedly delayed, and eventually scaled back to apply only to foreign entities. The collapse wasn’t bad luck. It was the predictable result of a law whose design assumed compliance from people specifically motivated not to comply.
What the law tried to do
The CTA required tens of millions of small businesses โ LLCs, partnerships, corporations โ to report their beneficial owners to FinCEN, the Treasury’s financial-crimes bureau. The goal was to dismantle the network of anonymous shell entities used to launder money, evade sanctions, and hide assets in divorce, bankruptcy, and tax cases.
The reasoning was straightforward: criminals use shell companies because they don’t have to identify themselves, so requiring identification would force the criminals out. The flaw is in the next sentence. Criminals who are willing to commit money laundering are not going to be stopped by a beneficial-ownership form. They lie on the form, or they don’t file it, or they file it with a nominee. The cost falls on the small businesses that would have been compliant anyway.
The implementation problems were severe
FinCEN had to build a reporting system from scratch and notify roughly 32 million existing entities. The notification campaign was thin โ most small business owners had never heard of the requirement weeks before the deadline. Penalties for non-filing reached $500 a day and potential criminal charges, applied to businesses that often had a single owner who was also the bookkeeper.
Federal courts repeatedly halted enforcement. A Texas district court found the law likely unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause, and the Fifth Circuit’s handling of the appeal produced months of regulatory whiplash. By early 2025 the Treasury announced it would not enforce the law against domestic entities at all โ a near-total reversal of the original framework.
The structural problem with beneficial-ownership regimes
Other countries have tried similar registries and run into similar obstacles. The UK’s beneficial ownership register, often cited as a model, contains widespread inaccurate filings and has been used by criminals to add a veneer of legitimacy by filing fake names. Enforcement requires investigative capacity that most agencies, including FinCEN, don’t have at the scale of millions of entities.
The deeper problem is that the people most worth catching are the people most willing to lie, and the people most likely to comply are not the targets. A registry designed for mass compliance ends up imposing significant costs on legitimate businesses while offering thin protection against the bad actors it was meant to deter. Targeted investigation of high-risk transactions, supported by bank reporting and existing AML rules, generally produces better results.
The bottom line
The CTA wasn’t a bad idea sabotaged by politics. It was a poorly designed idea with a politically attractive surface. Beneficial ownership transparency is a legitimate policy goal, but the universal-registry model was always going to founder on enforcement, accuracy, and constitutional challenge. A narrower, risk-based approach was the realistic path, and it’s the one we’ll likely end up with.
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