ESRS S2 for Financial Services Companies: 2026 Compliance Guide
- →Financial Services companies in ESRS S2 scope must report on ESRS modules E1, S1, S4, G1. Average sector readiness is only 41%.
- →Key compliance risks: Financed emissions (Scope 3 Cat 15) and SFDR PAI disclosures.
- →Focus on Scope 3 data collection as the primary compliance challenge.
Which ESRS S2 requirements apply to Financial Services?
Banks, asset managers, insurers and financial advisers subject to both CSRD and SFDR.
For ESRS S2 compliance, Financial Services companies must report on the following ESRS topical standards where material: E1, S1, S4, G1. The double materiality assessment will determine which of these modules require full disclosure.
Average compliance readiness across the Financial Services sector is currently 41% — significantly below the threshold needed for a clean assurance opinion. Most companies in this sector have work to do before their reporting deadline.
Key ESG risks for Financial Services companies
ESRS S2 requires Financial Services companies to disclose impacts, risks and opportunities across all material topics. The most commonly material topics for this sector are:
Financed emissions (Scope 3 Cat 15)
SFDR PAI disclosures
Climate transition risk
Financial Services companies that fail their double materiality assessment risk under-reporting material topics. Auditors pay particular attention to this sector's financed emissions (scope 3 cat 15).
Scope 3 emissions for Financial Services
Scope 3 emissions are typically the largest part of a Financial Services company's carbon footprint. The most material Scope 3 categories for this sector are categories 15 under the GHG Protocol.
For ESRS S2 compliance under ESRS E1-5, you must:
1. Screen all 15 Scope 3 categories 2. Report on material categories with documented methodology 3. Set Scope 3 reduction targets for material categories 4. Obtain third-party assurance over your Scope 3 data
ESGMaster automates Scope 3 calculation for Financial Services companies using DEFRA 2026 emission factors.
Start with a spend-based Scope 3 screening across all 15 categories. This identifies which categories are material without requiring detailed activity data — you can then focus detailed calculation effort where it matters most.
ESRS S2 compliance roadmap for Financial Services
Phase 1 — Assess (Months 1–3) Determine your ESRS S2 scope status, complete a double materiality assessment, and run a gap analysis against ESRS E1, S1, S4, G1.
Phase 2 — Collect (Months 4–9) Build data collection processes for all material ESRS metrics. For Financial Services, focus on financed emissions (scope 3 cat 15) data first — it is typically the hardest to collect and the most scrutinised by auditors.
Phase 3 — Report (Months 10–12) Draft your ESRS S2 report, engage third-party assurance, implement XBRL tagging, and file with your national authority.
ESGMaster compresses this timeline by automating Phases 1 and 2 — delivering your gap analysis in 8 seconds and your draft report in hours.
ESRS modules for Financial Services — materiality guide
| ESRS Module | Topic | Typical materiality for Financial Services | Key data required |
|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | Climate change | High | Scope 1, 2, 3 GHG emissions |
| S1 | Own workforce | High | Headcount, pay gap, turnover |
| S4 | Consumers | High | Customer safety, complaints |
| G1 | Business conduct | High | Anti-corruption, lobbying |
Frequently asked questions
Does ESRS S2 apply to Financial Services companies?
Yes, if your Financial Services company meets the ESRS S2 size thresholds: 1,000+ employees AND €450M+ net turnover (post-Omnibus). Even companies below these thresholds face ESRS S2-equivalent data requests from their large customers.
Which ESRS modules must Financial Services companies report on?
Based on typical Financial Services business models, the most commonly material ESRS modules are E1, S1, S4, G1. However, you must conduct your own double materiality assessment — the final list depends on your specific operations and value chain.
What Scope 3 categories matter most for Financial Services?
The most material Scope 3 categories for Financial Services companies are categories 15 under the GHG Protocol. Category 15 is typically the largest source of emissions in this sector.
How long does ESRS S2 compliance take for a Financial Services company?
From zero to first ESRS S2 report typically takes 12–18 months for Financial Services companies. The biggest time bottlenecks are Scope 3 data collection and third-party assurance provider engagement. ESGMaster reduces the data collection phase to weeks rather than months.
What does ESRS S2 compliance cost for a Financial Services company?
Consultant-led ESRS S2 compliance for Financial Services companies typically costs €100,000–€400,000 in year one, depending on complexity and number of subsidiaries. AI-powered platforms like ESGMaster reduce first-year costs by 60–80%.