How often is the EU sanctions list updated?

Last reviewed 24 June 2026.

There's no fixed schedule. The EU amends its consolidated sanctions list whenever the Council adopts new measures — often several times a month in active periods — published in the Official Journal. A list you pulled three weeks ago tells you nothing about today.

Why there's no timetable

Sanctions are a foreign-policy tool, so updates follow events, not a calendar. When the Council decides to designate new persons or entities (or to amend or remove existing ones), it does so as and when needed. During a fast-moving situation that can mean multiple rounds of listings within a few weeks; at other times, long quiet stretches.

How an update actually happens

  1. The Council adopts a Regulation and/or Decision introducing or amending measures.
  2. It's published in the Official Journal of the EU — generally the point from which the legal obligation bites.
  3. The change is reflected in the EU consolidated financial sanctions list (the FSF files) that firms screen against.

The key nuance: the obligation follows the Official Journal, not the moment your data provider (or your spreadsheet) happens to get refreshed.

Why a weekly or monthly pull isn't safe

If a new designation takes effect on a Tuesday and your list is only refreshed on the first of the month, you could keep holding or dealing with a frozen entity for weeks without knowing. That's not a theoretical risk — it's exactly the window that gets firms into trouble. The fix is simple: re-screen the whole book against the current list at least once every business day, and screen any new position the moment it's added.

Veracore pulls the live EU list fresh on every run, so you're always screening against the current version — request a free portfolio screen to see it, or try the free checker.

FAQ

How often is the EU sanctions list updated?
On no fixed schedule — whenever the Council adopts new measures, sometimes several times a month, via the Official Journal.
How are changes published?
Through a Council Regulation/Decision in the Official Journal, then reflected in the EU consolidated list (FSF files).
Is a weekly or monthly refresh enough?
No — designations can take effect within days, so re-screen against the current list at least daily.

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EU sanctions screening for fund managers · OFAC vs EU vs UK: which lists to screen