how to get AML/kyc jobs

 


AML is not an “easy entry” career — it’s a skills-first domain.

Below are the real gaps that silently eliminate candidates before they even get close to the hiring manager.

  1. Lack of practical Experience-Many candidates complete basic AML courses and assume that theoretical knowledge is enough. Recruiters, however, expect skills like identifying red flags, risk-scoring customers, reading KYC documents, and understanding how real cases unfold. Without practical proficiency, candidates fail interviews and case-study assessments.
  2. Weak Understanding of AML Regulations-AML is a regulation-driven field. Candidates who are not familiar with FATF recommendations, KYC norms, sanctions frameworks, PEP handling, or local regulations (such as PMLA, RBI guidelines, OFAC, FinCEN expectations) quickly fall behind. Employers need analysts who can apply regulatory requirements in day-to-day decisions.
  3. Poor Data and Excel Skills-AML today is heavily technology-enabled. Analysts work on transaction data, customer profiles, and alert dashboards. Basic skills like VLOOKUP, pivot tables, data cleaning, and anomaly detection are mandatory. Candidates who lack data literacy appear outdated and struggle with even simple test assignments.
  4. Inability to Handle Real Alert Investigation-Many applicants have never worked on a transaction monitoring alert, EDD file, or SAR/STR narrative. They cannot explain how to escalate alerts, evaluate risk, or justify a decision with evidence. Since most AML jobs begin with alert investigation, this becomes a major elimination factor.
  5. No Exposure to Typologies and Case Studies-AML roles require understanding of how real financial crimes look in data—layering, structuring, mule accounts, use of MSBs, casinos, cross-border transfers, and digital fraud patterns. Without exposure to such typologies, candidates cannot interpret patterns or connect the dots during interviews.

The Top 10% Succeed Because They Build Practical Capability

Breaking into AML is not about luck. It is about demonstrating practical skill, regulatory understanding, and investigative thinking. Candidates who invest in real-world learning—datasets, red-flag analysis, case files, STR writing, risk modeling—are the ones who stand out to employers.