Statutory guidance

Haiti Sanctions: guidance

Statutory guidance for the Haiti sanctions regime, plus a summary of its purposes, scope and prohibitions.

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The Haiti (Sanctions) Regulations 2022, and certain other regulations, are in force to implement certain UN obligations.  

This summary gives a quick overview of the sanctions in place under the regime. It is not comprehensive and is not a replacement for the statutory guidance or the regulations themselves. 

Summary 

Regime is limited in scope to: 

  1. sanctions targeting designated persons  
  2. sanctions in respect of arms and related material of all types 

Designated persons  

The UK Sanctions List tells you who is designated under the regime and which sanctions have been applied to them. A designated person can be an individual, a business or an organisation.  

The statutory guidance lists in detail the sanctions that can apply in respect of designated persons, including: 

  • an asset freeze on their funds and other assets 
  • making available funds or economic resources to them or for their benefit 
  • immigration sanction (travel ban) 

Sanctioned goods and services 

You must not export or otherwise supply or transfer to or for use in Haiti, or to a person connected with Haiti certain goods in these categories (this is not an exhaustive list): 

  • military, security and para-military goods, software and technology and arms, ammunition and related material

Related financial services, brokering services and technical assistance may also be subject to sanctions.

Updates to this page

Published 9 December 2022
Last updated 25 March 2026 show all updates
  1. Added summary of the regime's purposes, scope and prohibitions.

  2. Page updated for better clarity and usability, and to reflect changes made by UN Security Council Resolution 2794 (2025) and Haiti (Sanctions) (Amendment) Regulations 2025.

  3. Addition to Section 3.1 on Exceptions reflecting the Sanctions (EU Exit) (Treasury Debt) Regulations 2025.

  4. Page navigation has been updated for better usability. No material changes to text.

  5. These changes reflect the Sanctions (EU Exit) (Miscellaneous Amendments) (No.2) Regulations 2024 and taken together make a range of technical changes with the purpose of improving OFSI’s ability to gather intelligence on industry’s compliance with financial sanctions, strengthen OFSI’s enforcement powers, enable OFSI to conduct its licensing responsibilities more efficiently, and clarify financial sanctions legislation where there is existing uncertainty.

  6. Arms embargo updated to reflect the Haiti (Sanctions) (Amendment) Regulations 2024 in accordance with the UNSCRs 2699 (2023) and 2700 (2023).

  7. Updating the arms embargo to reflect UN Security Council Resolutions 2699 (2023) and 2700 (2023).

  8. Updated to reflect provisions of UN Humanitarian Exception SI

  9. First published.

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