Supreme Data on Supreme Leaders

The open-source database of sanctions, watchlists, and politically exposed persons — aggregating hundreds of sources and relied on by compliance teams, investigators, and journalists.

2,194,613 entities · 332 data sources
· updated · bulk data · screening tool

People and companies that matter

Persons of interest data provides the key that helps analysts find evidence of sanctions evasion, money laundering and other criminal activity.

Clean and transparent data

Our open source data pipeline takes on the complex task of building a clean, de-duplicated, and well-understood dataset.

Sources with global scope

We integrate data from 332 global sources, including official sanctions lists, data on politically exposed persons and entities of criminal interest.

Use OpenSanctions to manage business risk

OpenSanctions is free for non-commercial users. Business and commercial users must either acquire a data license to use our high-quality dataset, or subscribe to our pay-as-you-go API service.

What we’ve been building RSS

Updates from OpenSanctions, including new features, technical deep dives, and analysis.

  • How LLMs are changing screening

    How LLMs are changing screening

    Tags: LLMs, Entity resolution, Narrative matching · Published:

    A shift towards narrative matching is redefining the compliance industry's data needs. Here at OpenSanctions, experiments using Large Language Models (LLMs) to deduplicate sanctioned and politically exposed entities are already reshaping how we collect data.

  • Wikidata contains many gaps in its political data. We’ve built a tool to change that

    Wikidata contains many gaps in its political data. We’ve built a tool to change that

    Tags: Wikidata, PEP data · Published:

    Introducing PoliLoom: our new crowdsourcing tool that breaks common data collection tasks into fun, five-minute contributions. Come and help us track who’s running the world.

  • As the CIA closes The World Factbook, we’re opening our global map of political power

    As the CIA closes The World Factbook, we’re opening our global map of political power

    Tags: CIA, The World Factbook, PEP · Published:

    We’re on a mission to track who runs the world — and to make political data more transparent.

  • Making the most of the OpenSanctions dataset browser

    Making the most of the OpenSanctions dataset browser

    Tags: Sanctions, Programs, Metadata · Published:

    The OpenSanctions data collection comprises over 320 data sources, ranging from the UN Security Council sanctions to the German police’s most wanted list. Here’s how to find out whether we cover the data source you’re looking for.

  • This was 2025 at OpenSanctions

    This was 2025 at OpenSanctions

    Tags: Company, 2025 · Published:

    Over the last year, we’ve grown our team to almost 15 members, discovered that Berlin co-working spaces can go insolvent (and in the process found a beautiful new place!), and spent a few days brainstorming in Prague. And our focus in 2025, as always, remained on our product.

Collections & datasets JSON

Collections are data distributions provided by OpenSanctions that combine entities from many sources based on a topic. Learn more...

Consolidated Sanctions

98,721 entities

Consolidated list of sanctioned entities designated by different countries and international organisations. This can include military, trade and travel restrictions.

OpenSanctions Default

2,194,613 entities

This distribution includes the data collected by OpenSanctions that meets quality standards and would be useful in a screening system or for investigative use.

Special interest collections contain selections of the data that are more specialised than the default collections.