⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria's FATF grey list exit is now imminent. The February 2026 plenary confirmed substantial completion of the action plan in just 16 months — a notably rapid timeline — with an on-site assessment as the final step before removal. Exit is likely at the June or October 2026 plenary, which will materially reduce correspondent banking friction, trade finance costs, and investor due diligence barriers.

Bottom Line: Maintain compliance capabilities now but plan for a materially improved operating environment within months — companies that invested during the grey-list period will have first-mover advantage.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for AlgeriaCritical
the FATF grey-listing affects every international business transaction touching Algeria. The February 2026 substantially-completed determination signals imminent exit.
Action Timeline6-12 months
exit likely at June or October 2026 plenary. Companies should prepare for post-exit opportunities while maintaining current compliance.
Key StakeholdersBanking Compliance Officers, CFOs (trade finance), Investment Managers, Fintech Founders, Government Procurement Officers
Decision TypeStrategic
the grey-list exit will materially change Algeria’s business environment for international finance and technology investment
Priority LevelCritical
Delays risk significant competitive disadvantage — early action on algeria and the FATF Grey List is essential

Quick Take: A successful FATF exit would immediately improve Algeria’s correspondent banking relationships, making cross-border payments faster and cheaper for the growing freelancer economy and e-commerce sector. Fintech startups like ALPAY and SofizPay should prepare their international expansion playbooks now — the moment Algeria exits the grey list, PSP licensing and cross-border payment corridors to Europe and the Gulf become dramatically more viable.

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