At the 6th ASEAN Digital Ministers’ Meeting, ASEAN endorsed (1) the “ASEAN Guide on Anti-Scam Policies and Best Practices,” described as a comprehensive regional framework intended to harmonise baseline anti-scam measures and strengthen trust in communications across ASEAN Member States; and (2) “Enhanced ASEAN Guidelines for Strengthening Resilience and Repair of Submarine Cables,” updating 2019 guidance and recommending measures such as streamlined permitting, single points of contact, and improved inter-agency coordination to reduce repair timelines. Compliance teams for telecom operators, digital platforms, and critical infrastructure stakeholders should monitor for Member State implementation and align internal anti-scam controls and incident response/governance practices with the endorsed baseline recommendations.
ASEAN published the ACCSQ Sectoral Plan 2026–2030, an official regional work programme to advance harmonisation of standards, technical regulations, and conformity assessment procedures across ASEAN Member States. For compliance and market-access teams, this signals ASEAN-level priorities that may translate into future aligned technical requirements and greater mutual recognition/acceptance of test results and certifications. The plan highlights actions such as aligning with international standards, expanding work into emerging sectors (including technology and sustainability), reviewing the effectiveness of existing ASEAN standards/instruments, strengthening mutual recognition of conformity assessment results, and coordinating positions in international/regional bodies.
The 57th AEM Joint Media Statement reports that the ASEAN Authorised Economic Operator Mutual Recognition Arrangement (AAMRA) had been implemented by six ASEAN Member States since 28 February 2025, and that ASEAN aimed for full implementation across all ten Member States by December 2025. This is relevant for customs/trade compliance programmes as it indicates expanded mutual recognition of AEO status and related facilitation benefits, with a stated regional target timeline for broader rollout.
The 57th AEM Joint Media Statement indicates that ASEAN signed a Protocol to amend the ASEAN Sectoral Mutual Recognition Arrangement (MRA) for Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) inspection of manufacturers of medicinal products, and refers to expected entry-into-force for implementation (without providing a date). This is relevant for pharmaceutical manufacturing and regulatory affairs teams because an updated MRA can change how GMP inspections and recognition of inspection outcomes are conducted across ASEAN, potentially affecting inspection planning, audit readiness, and market authorization support.
The Joint Media Statement of the 57th ASEAN Economic Ministers’ Meeting (23 September 2025) reports that negotiations to upgrade the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) were concluded on 24 May 2025 and that ASEAN targeted signing the 2nd Protocol to Amend ATIGA at the 47th ASEAN Summit in October 2025. For trade compliance teams, this signals forthcoming changes to ASEAN’s trade-in-goods rules, including coverage of emerging issues (as described in the statement) and inclusion of an Alternative Dispute Resolution mechanism for ASEAN trade-in-goods disputes. The statement does not confirm entry-into-force or compliance dates.
ASEAN adopted the ASEAN Plan of Action in Combatting Transnational Crime (2026–2035) at the 19th AMMTC (10 September 2025). Although not a product standard, it is an official ASEAN framework that signals strengthened regional enforcement cooperation and coordination priorities (e.g., on transnational crime themes) and encourages review/harmonisation of relevant national laws and practices. Compliance teams (AML/fraud/cyber/investigations) may use it as an indicator of increased cross-border cooperation and potential alignment of enforcement approaches among ASEAN Member States.
ASEAN published the AEC Strategic Plan 2026–2030, an official policy framework for the ASEAN Economic Community covering 2026–2030. The plan includes objectives relevant to regulatory compliance planning, including enhancing transparency and good regulatory practices and advancing harmonisation of standards/technical regulations and conformity assessment procedures. While not itself a binding technical regulation, it sets regional priorities that commonly drive subsequent sectoral work programmes and coordinated national reforms affecting market access and product compliance across ASEAN.
ASEAN adopted the “ASEAN Guideline on the Implementation of the Non-Punishment Principle for Protection of Victims of Trafficking in Persons” (adopted ad referendum on 27 May 2025). The guideline provides implementation-oriented direction for Member States on applying the non-punishment principle, including considerations for legislative frameworks, identification/screening by frontline officers, prosecutorial and judicial application, remedies, and monitoring/reporting mechanisms. Organizations with recruitment, labor, travel, hospitality, logistics, or supply-chain exposure in ASEAN may need to align internal victim-identification, referral, and cooperation protocols with emerging Member State implementation approaches.
ASEAN announced that the Second Protocol to Amend the Agreement Establishing the ASEAN–Australia–New Zealand Free Trade Area (AANZFTA) entered into force on 21 April 2025. The Protocol updates/enhances 13 existing chapters (including Rules of Origin, Customs Procedures and Trade Facilitation, Competition, and Electronic Commerce) and adds new chapters on trade and sustainable development, MSMEs, and government procurement. Compliance teams should review updated preferential trade qualification, customs/trade facilitation processes, and any revised obligations in covered chapters when operating across AANZFTA parties.
ASEAN announced the start of a review of the ASEAN Harmonized Tariff Nomenclature (AHTN) 2022 by the Technical Sub-Working Group on Classification, with the stated objective of supporting development and implementation of AHTN 2028 aligned with the WCO Harmonized System 2028. Trade compliance and customs classification teams should monitor this workstream for upcoming tariff classification changes that could affect product coding, origin documentation, duty treatment, licensing, and import/export declarations across ASEAN Member States.