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Recent Regulatory Changes to Bank Capital Requirements

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Summary

Federal bank regulators have released multiple proposed and final rules since 2025 that would reduce capital requirements for banks. Changes include a reduction of the Community Bank Leverage Ratio from 9% to 8%, modifications to stress test models that would lower stress capital buffers, and proposals to standardize risk-based capital calculations for larger institutions. The rules apply differently to banks based on asset size and systemic importance, with Category I (G-SIBs) and Category II banks facing distinct requirements compared to smaller community banks.

What changed

The Congressional Research Service summarizes six recent regulatory actions affecting bank capital requirements. These include a proposal to reduce the Community Bank Leverage Ratio threshold from 9% to 8% and extend the grace period for non-compliance from two to four months for banks under $10 billion in assets. Additional proposals would modify stress test models and global market shocks to reduce required capital under stress capital buffers for Category I through IV banks, standardize capital calculations for large banks by replacing parallel approaches with an expanded risk-based approach, and adjust capital definitions and risk weights for smaller banks.

Banks and financial institutions should monitor these developments as they progress through the regulatory process. Institutions in higher categories (I-IV based on systemic importance) face different timelines and requirements. The changes would lower funding costs for banks but may reduce safety margins against failure risk.

What to do next

  1. Monitor proposed rulemaking activity from federal bank regulators
  2. Review applicability of capital requirement changes to your institution's category
  3. Assess potential impact on capital planning and stress testing outcomes

Archived snapshot

Apr 15, 2026

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Recent Regulatory Changes to Bank Capital Requirements

April 14, 2026 IN12680

Recent Regulatory Changes to Bank Capital Requirements April 14, 2026
(IN12680) Capital requirements are one of the primary ways banks are regulated for safety and soundness. (For background, see CRS Report R47447, Bank Capital Requirements: A Primer and Policy Issues.) Under leadership appointed by President Trump, federal bank regulators have released several proposed or final rules since 2025 that on net would effectively reduce how much capital banks are required to hold. These changes are taking place in the broader context of bank regulatory relief that regulators have pursued and the 119 th Congress has considered.

Capital is a relatively expensive source of funding for banks. Therefore, reducing required capital will lower banks' funding costs, which could increase the provision of bank credit; however, holding insufficient capital would increase the risk of bank failure.

Table 1 presents a brief description of five proposed rules and one final rule promulgated since 2025 affecting bank capital. Each rule applies to a different set of banks. Regulators separate banks with over $100 billion in assets into four categories for regulatory purposes based on their size and systemic importance. Category I consists of the eight U.S. global systemically important banks (G-SIBs). Banks in the other three categories are progressively less systemically important.

Table 1. Recent Rulemakings Modifying Capital Requirements

| Changes to | Status/Date | Description |
| Community Bank Leverage Ratio (CBLR) | Proposal (12/25) | Tier 1 capital/assets would be reduced from 9% to 8%, and the grace period for banks to remain in the CBLR program while not meeting the requirement would be extended from two to four months.

Applies to banks with less than $10 billion in assets that opt into the CBLR framework. |
| Stress T ests | Proposal (11/25) | Proposed changes to the stress test model and the global market shock would effectively reduce banks' stress test losses, which would reduce required capital under the stress capital buffer.

Applies to Category I, II, III, and IV banks. |
| Advanced Approach (Basel Endgame Re-Proposal) | Proposal (3/26) | Would standardize and simplify the capital calculations for large banks. Would eliminate the use of parallel calculations to determine risk-weighted assets, replacing the standardized and advanced approaches with one "expanded risk-based approach." Would generally reduce risk-weighted assets, thereby reducing required capital for covered institutions.

Applies to Category I and II banks and banks with significant trading activity; other banks that opt in. |
| Standardized Approach and AOCI | Proposal (3/26) | Would make changes to the definition of capital, reduce risk weights for certain assets, and adjust some of the methodologies used to make risk-weight calculations. Notably, would include most accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI) in the definition of capital.

Applies to all banks that are not Category I or II or that do not opt into the CBLR regime. The AOCI changes apply to Category III and IV banks. |
| Global Systemically Important Bank (G-SIB) Surcharge | Proposal (3/26) | Various changes to the G-SIB surcharge formula that would reduce the average capital surcharge from 2.7% to 2.3%.

Applies to Category 1 banks. |
| Enhanced Supplementary Leverage Ratio (eSLR) | Final Rule (12/25) | At the holding company level, reduces the eSLR from 5% to 3% plus 50% of the G-SIB's Method 1 capital surcharge. For the depository subsidiaries, reduces the eSLR from 6% to no more than 4%. A corresponding reduction based on 50% of the Method 1 surcharge would be made to the leverage-based total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) requirements.

Applies to all Category 1 banks. |
Source: CRS.

Regulators can raise or lower required capital in one of two general ways: by changing the ratio of required capital to assets or by changing how banks calculate their risk-weighted assets. The enhanced supplementary leverage ratio (eSLR) and community bank leverage ratio (CBLR) rules reduce capital by lowering ratios, whereas the other proposals change risk-weighted asset calculations.

Figure 1 illustrates how much required capital across a bank's holding company would decline on average for each category of bank if the recent proposed and final rules in Table 1 went into effect unchanged (relative to the requirements in place in November 2025). The cumulative effect of these rules would be to reduce required Tier 1 capital by 5.6% to 7.9%, depending on the type of bank.

| Figure 1. Cumulative Projected Effect of Recent Rules on Required Tier 1 Capital for Bank Holding Companies |
| |
| Source: Regulators' analysis in the proposed rules in Table 1.

Notes: Effects of the Endgame re-proposal on banks that are not in Category I or II are not shown. The AOCI proposal was published in the standardized approach proposal. |
For Category I and II banks, the Basel III Endgame re-proposal is projected to require banks to hold 1.6% more capital. (This is less than the 2023 Basel Endgame proposal, which would have also applied to Category III and IV banks and would have increased required capital by 9% for Category I-IV banks. The 2026 Endgame proposal is a re-proposal of the 2023 proposal.) However, three other recent rules would more than offset this increase in required capital, leading to a net decrease in required capital of 6%.

Category III and IV banks would be required, under the standardized approach proposal, to include most parts of accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI) in capital, which would have the effect of increasing required capital by 2.6%. This increase is more than offset by the decrease in required capital from the rest of the standardized proposal and stress tests proposals, leading to a net decrease in required capital of 5.6% for Category III and IV banks.

Banks with less than $100 billion but more than $10 billion in assets are subject only to the standardized approach proposal. Qualifying banks with less than $10 billion can choose between the CBLR, in which case they are subject to the CBLR proposal, and risk-weighted capital requirements, in which case they are subject to the standardized proposal. The CBLR proposal also reduces required capital, but the regulators did not provide an estimate of the percentage reduction. For the banks subject to it, the largest source of decline in required capital (6.4% to 7.9%, depending on the group) is attributable to the standardized proposal, not including its changes to the treatment of AOCI.

Download PDF Download EPUB Revision History Apr. 14, 2026 HTML · PDF Metadata Report Type: Insight Source: Congress.gov Raw Metadata: JSON

Named provisions

Community Bank Leverage Ratio Stress Tests Advanced Approach (Basel Endgame) Standardized Approach and AOCI G-SIB Surcharge

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
CRS
Published
April 14th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
IN12680

Who this affects

Applies to
Banks
Industry sector
5221 Commercial Banking
Activity scope
Capital requirements Stress testing Risk-weighted assets
Threshold
Banks with over $100 billion in assets are categorized into four groups (I-IV) based on size and systemic importance; banks under $10 billion may opt into CBLR framework
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Banking
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
Basel III
Topics
Securities Financial Services

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