US companies – here’s what matters most
The EU’s finalized amendments to the CSRD and CSDDD provide certainty on whether and how companies will need to comply with these requirements. However, US companies will now have to monitor relevant Member State transposition processes. This, along with EFRAG’s submission of its simplified ESRS to the European Commission (EC), has given greater clarity on whether companies will be in scope of the CSRD and, if so, what needs to be reported.
US companies should start moving forward again by assessing how these new scoping thresholds and reporting standards will impact their sustainability reporting strategy.
In March 2026, the first Omnibus simplification package entered into force, which includes substantial amendments to both the CSRD and CSDDD. Most notably, the agreement increases the scoping thresholds for both directives, significantly reducing the number of companies in scope. Member States have 12 months to transpose them into national law. The table below summarizes key changes to the CSRD and CSDDD.
In December 2025, EFRAG – the EU’s corporate reporting advisory board – proposed simplifications to the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) and submitted them to the European Commission (EC). The EC is now proceeding with its own due process to see if more changes are needed. Our guide will help you understand the changes EFRAG has proposed and what they would mean in practice.
In March 2026, the EC proposed revisions to the EU Taxonomy Climate and Environmental Delegated Acts to simplify and update the technical screening criteria. A public consultation on the proposed revisions is currently open, with comments due by April 14, 2026.