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Priority review Rule Amended Draft

Solvency II Amendments Reducing Supervisory Reporting and Disclosure Burden

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Published March 30th, 2026
Detected March 30th, 2026
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Summary

EIOPA submitted draft amendments to two Implementing Technical Standards under Solvency II to the European Commission. The amendments implement the Solvency II review outcomes while reducing supervisory reporting and public disclosure requirements by 26% for quarterly templates (36% for small and non-complex undertakings) and by 30% for annual templates (44% for small and non-complex undertakings). The new requirements will take effect 30 January 2027, with a transitional provision allowing early relief for annual 2026 reporting.

What changed

EIOPA has submitted draft amendments to the ITS on supervisory reporting and public disclosure requirements under Solvency II. The amendments incorporate changes from the Solvency II review while achieving the Commission's goal of reducing administrative burden by at least 25% across all sectors (35% for SMEs). Key changes include reducing template submission frequencies, deleting certain annual templates, applying proportionality principles more broadly, and introducing technical simplifications.\n\nInsurance undertakings should note that new supervisory reporting requirements apply from 30 January 2027, meaning Q4 2026 and FY2026 reporting must follow current requirements. The SFCR 2026 (disclosed in 2027) also follows current rules, while SFCR 2027 (disclosed in 2028) reflects the new structure including new audit requirements. To provide early relief, EIOPA included a transitional provision exempting undertakings from reporting with the annual 2026 submission those templates expected to be deleted as of 30 January 2027.

What to do next

  1. Review which quantitative reporting templates will be deleted or modified under the draft amendments to prepare for reduced reporting obligations.
  2. Continue preparing Q4 2026 and FY2026 supervisory reports under current Solvency II requirements, as these remain unchanged until 30 January 2027.
  3. Apply the transitional provision where applicable to skip reporting templates that will be deleted in the January 2027 update.

Source document (simplified)

The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) submitted today to the European Commission its draft amendments of two Implementing Technical Standards (ITS) that set out supervisory reporting and disclosure requirements under Solvency II. The proposed amendments incorporate changes necessitated by the recent review of Solvency II while also supporting European Commission’s initiative to simplify rules and ease administrative burdens by reducing the reporting burden by at least 25% across all sectors (35% for SME).

The draft amendments to the ITS seek to achieve this by reducing the frequency of certain templates, deleting some annual templates, making greater use of proportionality principles and introducing technical simplifications across the framework.

If implemented as proposed, the reporting burden would be reduced by 26% for solo undertakings in terms of number of quarterly templates (36% for small and non-complex undertakings), by 30% in terms of annual templates (44% for small and non-complex undertakings) and by 22% in terms of data points.

EIOPA is of the view that the proposed reporting reductions would bring meaningful benefits – including a better use of the principle of proportionality – without jeopardising EIOPA’ and national supervisors’ ability to uphold the protection of policyholders and to maintain financial stability in Europe’s insurance sector.

Go to the draft amendments

Notes

The draft amendments of the two ITS take into account the feedback received during a public consultation between July and October 2025.

EIOPA Guidelines on the supervision of branches of third country insurance undertakings and those on reporting for financial stability purposes were also amended, while ensuring consistency between reporting requirements.

For a transparent overview, EIOPA provides track-changes versions of all documents.

The new supervisory reporting requirements under Solvency II will apply from the same day as the other provisions introduced by the Solvency II review, i.e. 30 January 2027. Therefore, Q4 2026 and the financial year 2026 reporting should be based on the current legal framework (i.e. before the review), while as of Q1 2027 the reporting shall be based on the amendments.

The same approach applies to the public disclosure requirements: the Solvency and Financial Condition Report (SFCR) 2026, disclosed in 2027, should be based on the current legal framework, while the SFCR 2027, disclosed in 2028, should reflect the new provisions (e.g. new structure of the SFCR as well as new audit requirement).

To help undertakings benefit from the planned burden reductions in the annual supervisory reporting as early as 2026, EIOPA has included a transitional provision in the ITS on supervisory reporting. This provision exempts undertakings from reporting with the annual 2026 submission those quantitative reporting templates that are expected to be deleted as of 30 January 2027.

Details

Publication date 30 March 2026
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Named provisions

ITS on Supervisory Reporting ITS on Public Disclosure Requirements Solvency and Financial Condition Report (SFCR) Proportionality Principles Technical Simplifications

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
EIOPA
Published
March 30th, 2026
Compliance deadline
January 30th, 2027 (306 days)
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Draft
Change scope
Substantive
Supersedes
Current ITS on Supervisory Reporting and Public Disclosure Requirements under Solvency II (pre-review)

Who this affects

Applies to
Insurers Government agencies
Industry sector
5241 Insurance
Activity scope
Supervisory Reporting Public Disclosure Solvency II Compliance
Threshold
Small and non-complex undertakings receive enhanced burden reduction (36% quarterly, 44% annual) compared to standard solo undertakings (26% quarterly, 30% annual)
Geographic scope
European Union EU

Taxonomy

Primary area
Insurance
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
Solvency II
Topics
Financial Services Consumer Protection

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