The European Central Bank (ECB) has officially confirmed that the Integrated Reporting Framework (IReF) program will move from its investigation phase to the realisation phase. This decision, made by the Governing Council, removes any lingering uncertainty about the project's future and provides the clarity the industry needs to begin strategic preparations in earnest. This is a major milestone: it marks a pivotal shift from a purely conceptual framework to a tangible approach for the most significant transformation in regulatory reporting this generation.

Overall, the ECB’s decision signals three important shifts:

  • A path forward: The move to the realisation phase confirms IReF is the definitive future of European regulatory reporting.
  • An urgent need for a strategic response: With the project now officially underway, the clock is ticking for banks to formulate their implementation strategy.
  • A clear focus on foundational readiness: Banks will need to modernize the data, controls, and infrastructure required to support harmonized reporting at scale.

The IReF foundation: Harmonizing European regulatory reporting

The strategic vision behind IReF is well-established: not just a technical update, but a fundamental rethinking of the relationship between banks and regulators. The overarching goal is the EU-wide integration of banks’ reporting.

This is driven by several key objectives:

  • improving data collection efficiency
  • reducing the overall reporting burden
  • harmonizing reporting obligations across member states, and
  • fostering greater stakeholder cooperation

To achieve this, the ECB has established a three-pillar strategy: 

  1. Integrated Reporting Framework (IReF): The core framework for unifying statistical reporting. 
  2. Joint Bank Reporting Committee (JBRC): A collaborative body to pave the way for wider integration between statistical, prudential, and resolution reporting. 
  3. Banks’ Integrated Reporting Dictionary (BIRD): A common language and semantic backbone to help banks produce consistent and high-quality regulatory reports.

The shift from static templates to a fully model-driven ecosystem is central to this vision, driven by the interplay between the IReF structured model (which defines the content) and technical meta-models such as DPM 2.0 (which specify validation rules and transmission formats). This enables a single, efficient framework to replace overlapping frameworks, ensure accuracy at the point of input, and lay a foundation for higher data quality and scalability.

It also explains why IReF readiness should be viewed as more than a compliance exercise. Standardized, well-governed regulatory data is the foundation for the next generation of reporting operations, including AI-enabled validation, exception management, workflow orchestration, and regulatory change response. Without that foundation, automation simply accelerates fragmentation.

Key challenges for banks on the road to IReF 

 

The transition to a granular, model-driven framework remains a significant undertaking. And, financial institutions still face critical challenges:

  • Managing data volume & complexity: IReF will require banks to move from aggregated template-based reporting toward granular, source-level data. That will result in an exponential increase in data volume and complexity, creating a fundamental change in how data is viewed – from limited queries like "How many loans of a certain type do we have?" to comprehensive dives into the full history, counterparty details, performing status, and associated collateral for every single loan on the bank’s books. A single aggregated value in one report could be replaced by millions of individual data records in IReF. Legacy systems, designed to handle a few thousand data points, were simply not designed for this data explosion.
  • Ensuring scalable reporting infrastructure: The sheer volume of granular data will overwhelm legacy reporting infrastructure. Systems built for predictable, batch-oriented workloads will collapse under the demands of processing, validating, and submitting terabytes of data within tight reporting windows, creating significant operational risk and a high likelihood of missed deadlines. A highly scalable and performant technical infrastructure is no longer an advantage but a prerequisite for compliance.
  • Automated data quality and governance: In a granular world, data quality is paramount, and the old methods of governance are no longer viable. Manually checking a final report with thousands of data points is already difficult; manually verifying millions of source-level records is impossible. The focus must shift from reactive, post-submission reconciliation to proactive, automated governance at the point of data ingestion. Ensuring accuracy, consistency, and full traceability for every single data element requires a system of intelligent, automated controls that can operate at a scale far beyond human capacity.

Regnology Reporting Hub (RRH): Purpose-built for IReF 

 

With decades of deep domain expertise at our core, Regnology provides the backbone banks can rely on to operate safely, efficiently, and strategically. Regnology Reporting Hub (RRH) is the comprehensive, cloud-native solution engineered to master the most demanding regulatory requirements, making it the ideal engine to conquer the specific challenges of IReF. Built on Ascend, our next-generation platform and the future-proof technology backbone, RRH brings the vision of Straight-Through Reporting (STR) to life by intelligently orchestrating the entire reporting lifecycle, from data ingestion to final submission.  

Grounded in a data-centric model, Regnology Granular Data (RGD): RGD reflects Regnology’s long-standing commitment to granular data as the foundation of regulatory reporting: continuously refined over more than 30 years and supported by the expertise of over 400 specialists. Designed to meet the structural demands of IReF, it provides a comprehensive, tested data model with harmonized structures and shared taxonomies aligned to supervisory expectations. The result is rapid time-to-value, consistent high-quality granular reporting, and immediate efficiency gains through the elimination of reconciliation, giving institutions confidence in a solution built on deep regulatory know-how.

Augmented by RGI, Regnology’s intelligence layer designed for the future of regulatory reporting: RGI elevates RRH beyond a reporting engine into an intelligence orchestration layer, enabling institutions to fully capitalize on automation while unlocking richer regulatory insight. Combining agentic AI capabilities with robust human‑in‑the‑loop governance, RGI coordinates data, logic, and regulatory context across the full reporting lifecycle—from intelligent data discovery and validation through to calculation, control, and report generation. Fully auditable and explainable by design, it enables firms to move beyond static, rule‑based compliance toward an adaptive reporting model, turning IReF‑driven automation into actionable insight, and regulatory change into greater resilience and responsiveness.

Preparing for the future of granular data reporting

 

The ECB’s decision to advance IReF to the realisation phase means the work ahead is too foundational to defer. This is a rare mandate to re-architect legacy data ecosystems, eliminate long-standing inefficiencies, and transform regulatory reporting from a cost center into a source of genuine institutional insight. The scale of that work means it cannot wait.

IReF readiness will depend on decisions institutions make now: how they standardize regulatory data, modernize reporting infrastructure, automate controls, and prepare for a more intelligent reporting lifecycle. Banks that use this period before the final timeline is published will be better positioned not only to meet the ECB’s requirements but also to build a more resilient, scalable, and insight-driven reporting function for the next era of regulatory change.

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