The Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) is the central EU rulebook for capital, liquidity and risk requirements applying to credit institutions and investment firms. As a directly applicable regulation, it forms the Single Rulebook of European banking supervision together with the CRD. We advise you on the entire CRR architecture – from capital structure and large exposure limits to disclosure obligations.
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Regulation (EU) 2024/1623 (CRR III) has applied since 1 January 2025 with stricter requirements including the Output Floor, revised credit risk approaches and new disclosure obligations. The underlying CRR architecture remains unchanged.
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We work with you to develop a tailored CRR compliance strategy that optimally aligns Basel III requirements with your strategic business objectives and growth plans.
Conducting a comprehensive CRR compliance assessment and Basel III readiness analysis
Developing an integrated implementation strategy with clear priorities and milestones
Building and optimizing capital, liquidity, and risk management frameworks
Implementing and integrating modern technology solutions for efficient processes
Continuous monitoring, optimization, and adjustment of CRR compliance performance
"The Capital Requirements Regulation is the regulatory foundation for sustainable banking in Europe. Our experience shows that institutions with a strategic CRR implementation not only achieve better compliance outcomes, but also realize significant competitive advantages through optimized capital efficiency and operational excellence."

Head of Risk Management
We offer you tailored solutions for your digital transformation
We comprehensively assess your current CRR compliance situation and develop a tailored Basel III implementation strategy covering all regulatory requirement areas.
We support you in the strategic management of your equity resources and the optimization of risk-weighted assets under CRR requirements.
We implement comprehensive liquidity management frameworks to meet all CRR liquidity requirements and to achieve strategic liquidity optimization.
We automate your regulatory reporting and notification processes and implement solid data management frameworks for CRR compliance.
We develop integrated risk management structures that meet all CRR requirements and optimally support strategic business objectives.
We implement modern technology solutions to automate CRR compliance processes and increase operational efficiency.
Choose the area that fits your requirements
The Advanced IRB Approach (A-IRB) allows institutions to estimate all risk parameters internally — probability of default (PD), loss given default (LGD), exposure at default (EAD) and credit conversion factors (CCF) — using proprietary models. ADVISORI guides you from model development through supervisory approval to ongoing validation — for risk-sensitive capital management under CRR III.
The CRD combined buffer requirement defines how capital conservation buffer, countercyclical buffer, systemic risk buffer and G-SII/O-SII buffers interact under a single framework. ADVISORI advises financial institutions on buffer stacking rules, capital distribution restrictions, MDA calculation and capital conservation planning — ensuring full compliance with the CRD buffer framework.
Capital adequacy requirements under the CRD comprise the overall capital requirement from Pillar 1 minimum, SREP capital add-on (P2R), combined buffer requirement, and Pillar 2 Guidance (P2G). We support banks in supervisory capital quantification, preparation for CRD VI changes, and integration of ESG risks into the capital adequacy assessment.
The Capital Requirements Directive (CRD VI) introduces stricter requirements for governance, fit-and-proper assessments, and ESG risk management. CRD compliance requires end-to-end processes from suitability assessments through internal control systems to ongoing supervisory reporting. ADVISORI supports credit institutions with comprehensive CRD compliance: gap analysis, governance framework design, and regulatory documentation.
The CRD Capital Conservation Buffer under Art. 129 CRD V/VI requires EU credit institutions to hold 2.5% Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital above minimum requirements. When breached, the MDA (Maximum Distributable Amount) calculation triggers automatic distribution restrictions on dividends, bonuses, and AT1 coupons. ADVISORI advises on strategic buffer management, CRD VI implementation, and regulatory capital planning across the EU framework.
The Capital Requirements Directive (CRD) defines comprehensive governance requirements for credit institutions across the EU — from fit-and-proper assessments to management body composition and remuneration policies. CRD VI adds ESG governance obligations and enhanced supervisory board duties. ADVISORI supports you in fully implementing all CRD governance requirements, preparing for suitability assessments, and establishing robust internal governance structures aligned with EBA guidelines.
The countercyclical capital buffer under Art. 130 CRD (Directive 2013/36/EU) requires credit institutions to maintain an institution-specific buffer as the weighted average of applicable national CCyB rates. The calculation under Art. 140 CRD considers the geographic distribution of credit risk exposures. ADVISORI supports you with CRD-compliant buffer calculation, ESRB reciprocity requirements and implementation of CRD VI changes effective January 2026.
The Capital Requirements Directive (CRD VI) imposes comprehensive requirements on credit institutions regarding governance, authorisation, and supervision. We support banks in the strategic implementation of all CRD requirements - from fit & proper assessments and internal governance structures to supervisory interaction. Our RegTech solutions make your CRD compliance efficient and sustainable.
End-to-end consulting for implementing the CRD credit risk framework: from the reformed Standardised Approach (SA-CR) and Output Floor calculations to ECAI due diligence requirements. We support your institution in the compliant implementation of CRR III capital requirements and the strategic optimisation of your risk weighting.
The Capital Requirements Directive (CRD) is the core EU directive governing banking supervision, governance, and authorization of credit institutions. From CRD IV through CRD V to the current CRD VI, it defines the supervisory framework that each EU member state must transpose into national law. ADVISORI has been supporting banks and financial institutions with CRD implementation for over 14 years.
The CRD requires credit institutions to maintain a transparent disclosure process with clear governance. We support banks in establishing three-line quality assurance, drafting the disclosure policy and preparing for the Pillar 3 Data Hub — so your disclosure report withstands supervisory scrutiny.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) operationalises the CRD through binding guidelines on internal governance, remuneration policy, fit-and-proper assessments and ESG risk management. With CRD VI transposition due by January 2026 and the governance guidelines revision (EBA/CP/2025/20), banks face comprehensive adjustments. ADVISORI supports the structured implementation of all EBA requirements — from gap analysis and MaRisk compatibility review to supervisory dialogue.
Fit and Proper ensures that members of the management body, supervisory board and key function holders meet regulatory requirements for knowledge, experience, integrity and time commitment. With CRD VI expanding the scope to key function holders and the revised EBA/ESMA joint guidelines introducing AML/CFT competence requirements, banks face growing complexity in their suitability assessment processes. ADVISORI supports you with systematic implementation of all Fit and Proper requirements across the EU framework.
The CRD defines binding requirements for the internal governance of credit institutions – from the three lines of defence model through internal control systems to the independent compliance function. With the new EBA guidelines (EBA/CP/2025/20) and CRD VI, requirements for risk management governance, control functions, and organizational structures are tightening significantly. ADVISORI supports you with gap analysis, implementation, and ongoing monitoring of your internal governance framework aligned with EBA standards.
Directive 2013/36/EU (CRD IV) together with the CRR forms the regulatory foundation of EU banking supervision under Basel III. We support financial institutions in the full implementation of governance, SREP and Pillar 2 requirements — from gap analysis to supervisory-compliant implementation.
The German implementation of the Capital Requirements Directive IV places specific demands on governance, risk management and BaFin interaction through the KWG and MaRisk framework. We guide banks through full CRD IV compliance in Germany — from gap analysis and SREP preparation to the implementation of compliant remuneration and governance structures.
The use of internal models to calculate risk-weighted assets requires supervisory approval from the ECB and national authorities. We guide your institution through the entire IRB approval process — from model development and validation per the revised ECB guide 2025 to successful regulatory approval. With our expertise, you navigate the tightened CRD VI requirements, the output floor and internal model restrictions with confidence.
The CRD establishes binding liquidity requirements for EU banks — from the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) and Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) to internal liquidity risk management. ADVISORI supports financial institutions with regulatory implementation, liquidity governance and building robust stress testing frameworks.
The Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) requires credit institutions to hold sufficient high-quality liquid assets (HQLA) to cover net cash outflows over a 30-day stress scenario. The minimum ratio is 100%. Under the EU implementation of Basel III through CRR/CRD, Delegated Regulation 2015/61 governs HQLA categories, inflow/outflow rates, and reporting requirements. ADVISORI supports banks with compliant LCR calculation, HQLA optimization, and supervisory reporting.
CRD Market Discipline creates transparency and trust between financial institutions and stakeholders through Pillar 3 disclosure requirements. As a leading consulting firm, we develop tailored RegTech solutions for automated disclosure processes, intelligent risk communication and strategic transparency optimisation with full IP protection.
The Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR), officially Regulation (EU) No 575/2013, is a directly applicable EU regulation that sets uniform prudential requirements for credit institutions and investment firms. Together with the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD), it forms the Single Rulebook of European banking supervision. As a regulation, the CRR applies directly in all EU Member States without requiring national transposition. Its objective is to create a level playing field: identical rules for all institutions across the internal market, preventing regulatory arbitrage and strengthening the stability of the financial system.
The CRR is organised into ten parts. Part
1 contains general provisions on subject matter, scope and definitions. Part
2 defines own funds and eligible liabilities (CET1, AT1, T2). Part
3 sets out own funds requirements for credit risk, market risk, operational risk and CVA risk. Part
4 addresses large exposures, Part
5 covers risk retention in securitisations. Part
6 establishes liquidity requirements (LCR, NSFR). Part
7 governs the leverage ratio, Part 7a regulates reporting requirements (COREP, FINREP). Part
8 defines disclosure obligations (Pillar 3) and Part
9 contains provisions on delegated acts and transitional arrangements.
The CRR applies to all CRR credit institutions and certain investment firms based in the EU. Requirements must be met at both the individual institution level and on a consolidated (group) basis. Small and non-complex institutions benefit from the proportionality principle and are subject to simplified reporting and disclosure requirements. Class
1 investment firms remain under the CRR, while smaller investment firms have fallen under the Investment Firms Regulation (IFR) since 2021. At national level, competent authorities may apply certain waivers or add-ons under defined conditions.
The Single Rulebook refers to the uniform set of supervisory rules that applies to all banks across the EU. The CRR implements the principle of maximum harmonisation: the quantitative requirements it contains – such as capital ratios, liquidity metrics and large exposure limits – apply identically in all Member States. National legislators may neither tighten nor relax these rules. This is supplemented by regulatory technical standards (RTS) and implementing technical standards (ITS) issued by the EBA, which specify the details of CRR application. The result is a level playing field that facilitates cross-border activities and prevents regulatory arbitrage.
CRR I (Regulation 575/2013) entered into force on
1 January
2014 and transposed the core Basel III standards into EU law: minimum capital ratios, liquidity metrics (LCR, NSFR) and the leverage ratio. CRR II (Regulation 2019/876) introduced tightened requirements from June
2021 for NSFR, leverage ratio, market risk (FRTB reporting requirements) and large exposures, along with simplified rules for small institutions. CRR III (Regulation 2024/1623) has applied since
1 January
2025 and finalises the Basel III implementation: the Output Floor (phased in to 72.5% by 2030), a revised credit risk standardised approach, restricted IRB flexibility and the new standardised measurement approach for operational risk.
The CRR is an EU regulation and applies directly in all Member States – it contains the quantitative prudential requirements: own funds ratios, liquidity requirements, large exposure limits, leverage ratio and disclosure obligations. The CRD is a directive that must be transposed into national law by each Member State (in Germany via the KWG). It governs the qualitative requirements: authorisation of credit institutions, governance, remuneration, supervisory powers (SREP), capital buffers and the sanctions regime. Together, the CRR and CRD form the unified EU regulatory package for banks and investment firms.
The CRR defines three classes of own funds: Common Equity Tier
1 (CET1) must amount to at least 4.5% of risk-weighted assets, Additional Tier
1 (AT1) at least 1.5% and Tier
2 at least 2% – together a minimum capital ratio of 8%. Institutions must calculate a total risk amount covering credit risk, market risk, operational risk and CVA risk. In addition, the combined buffer requirements from the CRD (capital conservation, countercyclical, systemic and G-SII/O-SII buffers) apply on top of the CRR minimum ratios.
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