Resources and Playbooks

    Supplier Screening Checklist for Procurement Teams

    A procurement-first checklist for sanctions and third-party due diligence before onboarding suppliers and renewing contracts.

    Procurement functions need a practical due diligence process that does not slow down sourcing. This checklist helps teams screen suppliers consistently while preserving compliance evidence.

    Updated: 2026-02-20

    What this workflow covers

    • Collect legal entity identifiers before vendor onboarding begins.
    • Screen suppliers and critical subcontractors against sanctions and watchlists.
    • Review beneficial ownership and related-party structures for hidden exposure.
    • Run refresh checks before contract renewal and major scope expansion.

    Key statistics

    Core sanctions regimes covered

    10+

    ScreenVeritAI coverage model

    Key workflow dimensions

    4 (Sanctions, PEP, Adverse Media, UBO)

    ScreenVeritAI workflow model

    Compliance glossary

    Sanctions screening

    A control process that checks a person or entity against sanctions and watchlist datasets.

    PEP

    Politically Exposed Person: an individual in a prominent public function requiring enhanced due diligence.

    UBO

    Ultimate Beneficial Owner: the natural person who ultimately owns or controls a legal entity.

    Authoritative references

    Expert perspective

    \"Risk controls perform best when sanctions checks and ownership context are reviewed together.\"

    ScreenVeritAI Compliance Team, RegTech Research

    Frequently asked questions

    Should procurement screen only direct suppliers?

    Direct suppliers are the baseline, but critical subcontractors and intermediaries should also be reviewed when risk warrants it.

    When should supplier screening be repeated?

    At minimum before renewals and after major risk events, with periodic checks for high-risk supplier categories.

    Can this checklist work with decentralized procurement teams?

    Yes. A shared checklist standard supports consistent controls across regions and business units.

    What documentation is needed for approvals?

    Include screening evidence, ownership findings, analyst comments, and final approval rationale in the supplier record.

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