Title 31 › Subtitle SUBTITLE IV— - MONEY › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - MONETARY TRANSACTIONS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - RECORDS AND REPORTS ON MONETARY INSTRUMENTS TRANSACTIONS › § 5330
Anyone who owns or controls a business that sends money must register that business with the Secretary of the Treasury no later than 180 days after either the Money Laundering Suppression Act of 1994 was enacted or the business started, whichever is later. The Treasury will create the registration form and rules. State laws about money transmitters still apply. Giving false or seriously incomplete information on the registration will count as failing to follow the rules. The registration must give the business name and location; names and addresses of owners, controllers, directors, officers, or others who run the business; the bank and branch where the business keeps a transaction account; a yearly estimate of business volume; and any other information the Treasury requires. The business must keep and give law enforcement a list of its agents and their contact information. The Treasury will set rules to decide when an agent is itself treated as a money transmitter. Definitions: "money transmitting business" — businesses (not the U.S. Postal Service or banks) that cash checks, exchange currency, send money or remittances, or issue similar instruments and must file reports under section 5313; "money transmitting service" — accepting and sending money or value by any means. Failure to follow these rules can bring a $5,000 civil penalty for each violation, with each day a separate violation, collected under section 5321.
Full Legal Text
Money and Finance — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
31 U.S.C. § 5330
Title 31 — Money and Finance
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73