International Academy of Financial Crime Litigators - Back in action: How the UK is reviving unexplained wealth orders (The Academy Bulletin)

International Academy of Financial Crime Litigators

Back in action: How the UK is reviving unexplained wealth orders (The Academy Bulletin)

In an article published in the Fall 2025 issue of the Bulletin of the International Academy of Financial Crime Litigators, Andrew Dornbierer explores the revival of unexplained wealth orders (UWOs) in the United Kingdom.

Introduced in 2017 as a tool to combat the abuse of UK’s markets to launder criminal proceeds, the UWO mechanism suffered a severe setback in 2020. After only a handful of attempts to use it, a decision by the High Court effectively left it sprawled on the canvas.

In the last year or so, however, the mechanism has slowly started to prove itself. Most recently, the UK’s Serious Fraud Office – in its first use of the UK’s UWO mechanism – secured GBP 1.1 million from the sale of a property belonging to the ex-wife of a convicted fraudster.

This article offers a short history of UWOs in the UK. It examines how, after a turbulent start and subsequent amendments to the mechanism, UWOs are now back to being used by UK authorities to tackle illicit financial flows. If applied responsibly, proportionately and in harmony with established legal rights, unexplained wealth orders promise to be a powerful tool in the UK’s fight to recover criminal assets.

This is the fifth issue of The Academy’s Bulletin. It has been established to transmit the work of Academy Fellows, draw attention to matters of importance to the legal community and provide high-level analysis of cutting-edge issues in global financial crime investigations and litigation. The Basel Institute on Governance acts as Secretariat to the Academy.

Published

11/2025 (8 months ago)

Author

Andrew Dornbierer

Countries

United Kingdom

Related publications

Quick guide, Quick Guide

Quick Guide 43: Corruption sanctions

2026 | Basel Institute on Governance

Dr Anton Moiseienko
SanctionsAnti-corruptionLaw enforcement

Working Paper

Working Paper 62: Corruption sanctions: What governments need to know

2026 | Basel Institute on Governance

Dr Anton Moiseienko
Anti-corruptionSanctionsLaw enforcement

Case Study

Case Study 13: The Beauty Queen case: non-conviction based forfeiture across borders

2026 | Basel Institute on Governance

Oscar Solorzano, Diana Cordero
Non-conviction based forfeitureInternational cooperationAnti-money launderingLaw enforcementAsset recovery

Policy Brief

Policy Brief 16: Enforcing foreign non-conviction based forfeiture orders

2026 | Basel Institute on Governance

Oscar Solorzano
Non-conviction based forfeitureInternational cooperationAnti-money launderingLaw enforcement

Report

Basel AML Index 2025

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Basel AML Index

Report

Colectânea de Legislação Penal e Processual Penal de Moçambique

null | Procuradoria-Geral da República; Basel Institute on Governance (International Centre for Asset Recovery)

Case Study

Case Study 11: International cooperation in the Migori County corruption case

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance, Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (Kenya) and International Anti-Corruption Coordination Centre

International cooperation

Article

Back in action: How the UK is reviving unexplained wealth orders (The Academy Bulletin)

2025 | International Academy of Financial Crime Litigators

Andrew Dornbierer
Asset recoveryAnti-money launderingUnexplained wealth

Quick Guide

Quick Guide 42: Non-conviction based confiscation

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Rita Simões
Non-conviction based forfeitureIllicit financial flows

Working Paper

Working Paper 59: Using corrupt proceeds to fight corruption: Rethinking how Switzerland uses illicit profits from foreign bribery

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Andrew Dornbierer
Anti-corruptionLaw enforcementIllicit financial flows

Policy Brief

Policy Brief 15: Rethinking how Switzerland uses illicit profits from foreign bribery settlements

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Andrew Dornbierer
Anti-corruptionLaw enforcementIllicit financial flows

Quick Guide

Quick Guide 41: Managing seized and confiscated assets

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Rita Simões
Asset managementAsset recovery

Report

La extinción de dominio desde sus principios

2025 | Programa GFP Subnacional – Basel Institute on Governance

Quick Guide

Quick Guide 40: Financial investigations in a cash economy

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Emmanuel Mringo
Financial investigations

Working Paper

Working Paper 55: Compensating the victims of foreign bribery: UK legislation, practice and recommended reforms

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Sam Hickey
Anti-corruptionAsset recovery

Policy Brief

Policy Brief 14: Cibler la fortune inexpliquée : Implications de la Directive de l’UE de 2024 relative au recouvrement d'avoirs

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Andrew Dornbierer
Asset recoveryUnexplained wealthHuman rights

Policy Brief

Policy Brief 14: Targeting unexplained wealth: Implications of the EU’s 2024 Directive on asset recovery

2025 | Basel Institute on Governance

Andrew Dornbierer
Unexplained wealthIllicit financial flowsAsset recoveryHuman rights

Article

The James Stone case: Peru’s fight to recover assets (The Academy Bulletin)

2024 | International Academy of Financial Crime Litigators

Oscar Solorzano

Quick Guide

Quick Guide 34: Public-private partnerships for financial intelligence sharing

2024 | Basel Institute on Governance

Simon Marsh
Financial investigationsAnti-money launderingLaw enforcement

Quick Guide

Quick Guide 33: Multi-agency asset recovery task forces

2024 | Basel Institute on Governance

Tom Walugembe