The Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR), officially Regulation (EU) No 575/2013, is a cornerstone of the European Union's banking regulatory framework. It establishes a single set of harmonised prudential rules that credit institutions and investment firms throughout the EU must respect. The CRR aims to strengthen the resilience of the EU's banking sector by ensuring institutions have sufficient capital, liquidity, and robust risk management processes to absorb potential losses and withstand financial shocks.
This regulation is directly applicable in all EU Member States, ensuring a uniform application of prudential standards and creating a level playing field for financial institutions operating within the single market.
The CRR is part of the Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV) package, which also includes the Capital Requirements Directive (Directive 2013/36/EU). Together, they transpose the Basel III international regulatory framework for banks into EU law.
The primary goal of the CRR is to enhance the financial stability of the EU by strengthening the prudential soundness of credit institutions and investment firms. Its key objectives are:
The CRR applies to:
The CRR includes several specific exemptions and derogations, including:
This part defines the components of regulatory capital, structured into tiers:
This part sets out the calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts (RWEA) for Pillar 1 risks:
Penalties for non-compliance are not detailed within the CRR itself. Enforcement is the responsibility of the national competent authorities (and the ECB for significant institutions within the Banking Union). Supervisory powers, including the ability to impose administrative penalties and other supervisory measures, are primarily laid down in the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD).
The Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) has a phased implementation timeline, with the original regulation applying from 1 January 2014. Significant amendments, particularly the 'CRR III' package implementing the final Basel III reforms, introduce new compliance deadlines:
From 1 January 2025: The majority of the new rules from the CRR III amendments become applicable. This includes:
Output Floor Phase-in (2025-2030): The output floor, which limits the capital benefits for banks using internal models, will be gradually introduced. It requires that a bank's risk-weighted assets (RWAs) calculated using internal models must be at least 72.5% of the RWAs calculated using standardised approaches. The implementation is phased to allow banks to adapt: