The mandatory case
In United Kingdom, entities that report under UK MiFIR and UK EMIR, supervised by Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), must hold a valid LEI. For them the question is not whether, but when.
The voluntary case
Beyond any mandate, an LEI is a globally-recognised, independently-verifiable identity. It speeds United Kingdom bank onboarding and KYC, satisfies overseas counterparties, and signals transparency — value that exists with or without a rule.
Who should consider one
UK banks and building societies, investment firms, UCITS and AIFs, insurers, pension schemes, FinTech and payment institutions, and — and any United Kingdom exporter, group or SPV that faces banks or counterparties abroad.
The bottom line
A mandate tells you that you must have an LEI; the business case tells you why you would want one anyway.
Key takeaways
• Mandatory for reporting entities under UK MiFIR and UK EMIR.
• Voluntarily valuable as a global trust signal.
• Speeds bank onboarding and cross-border dealing.
• One LEI works in every market.


