News release
The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has today announced proposals to reduce regulatory requirements for banks by deleting 37 individual reporting templates.
The proposals represent an initial set of targeted deletions of whole reporting templates that were inherited from European Union regulations. This is a first deliverable from the PRA’s strategic review of its banking data collections – the Future Banking Data project.
The vast majority of the templates being removed relate to financial reporting, improving an area which has been previously identified by firms as having overlapping and complex requirements.
The PRA has decided that these templates cover data which are either no longer necessary to support its work or are already available elsewhere. Their removal should benefit firms by reducing their administrative costs.
Rebecca Jackson, Executive Director for Authorisations, Regulatory Technology, and International Supervision and executive sponsor of Future Banking Data, said: “It’s essential to get the right data from firms in order to supervise them properly. But it’s also important that we do that as efficiently as possible and in a low-cost way, so they can focus on their core business and supporting their customers. Today’s announcement is another example of our ongoing work to enhance the proportionality of our regulation and support growth without risking the stability of firms or the wider financial system.”
The proposals build on a raft of simplifications the PRA has already made to reporting for insurers, reducing insurance reporting by one third. Firms are already benefitting from those changes.
This consultation will run for one month, with the goal of implementing the changes on
1 January 2026. This would save the industry an estimated £26 million annually.
The consultation forms an initial phase of the PRA’s Future Banking Data initiative, which aims over time to significantly reduce burdens on firms whilst ensuring the PRA receives the high-quality data it needs to do its job.
The proposed changes, and the planned future work in this area, build upon other recent announcements by the PRA designed to support growth. These include options to enhance competition in the mortgage market, work to make the resolution regime more proportionate, and plans to simplify the capital regime for smaller, UK-focused banks.
The Bank's Statistical Reporting team have launched a consultation to discontinue the collection and publication of Form BN on the further sectoral breakdown of non-resident monetary financial institutions.
Notes to editors
- The Future Banking Data consultation paper opens today, Monday 22 September 2025, and will close on Wednesday 22 October 2025.
- This consultation will run for one month, reflecting the desire to implement the changes on 1 January 2026.
- Templates being removed include topics such as financial assets at amortised cost, information on performing and non-performing exposures, and movements in allowances and provisions for credit losses.
- And later in the year, the PRA will publish a Discussion Paper setting out the principles underpinning the PRA’s approach to reporting with a view to supporting a series of pragmatic and incremental changes to bank reporting over the coming years, with demonstrated benefits at each step.
- The Bank of England, as the UK resolution authority, is also consulting today on deleting six resolution-related reporting templates. Both initiatives contribute to the broader objective of streamlining regulatory reporting.
- The Resolution deletions consultation paper also opens today, and will close on 21 November.
- This consultation will run for almost eight weeks, reflecting a later implementation date than the proposed PRA deletions.
- The Bank's Statistical Reporting team have also launched a consultation to discontinue the collection and publication of Form BN on the further sectoral breakdown of non-resident monetary financial institutions.
- The Statistical Reporting consultation opens today, and will close on 31 December.