ESEF Taxonomy and Reference File Download Link
https://eu2.contabostorage.com/00f3241116844f24b628f46d81abb929:st1/folder7/7247/1656286021_esma32_60_677_esef_validation_rules_2020_-_Standar_Format.xlsx
2026-05-30 21:58:05 - Admin
<style> body { font-family: Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 1.6; margin: 0; padding: 0 20px; background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333; } h1, h2, h3 { color: #004080; } a { color: #0066cc; text-decoration: none; } a:hover { text-decoration: underline; } .container { max-width: 900px; margin: 30px auto; background: #fff; padding: 30px; box-shadow: 0 0 8px rgba(0,0,0,0.1); } ul { margin-left: 20px; } </style><div class="container"> <h1>ESEF Taxonomy An Overview</h1> <p>The European Single Electronic Format (ESEF) is a regulatory initiative that requires listed companies in the European Union to publish their annual financial reports in a standardised, machinereadable format. Central to the ESEF framework is the <strong>ESEF taxonomy</strong> a setbystep classification system that defines the concepts, relationships and tagging rules companies must use when preparing their reports in XBRLXML.</p> <h2>Why a Taxonomy Matters</h2> <p>A taxonomy is a controlled vocabulary that gives a common language to financial data. By mapping each line item (e.g., Revenue, Net profit attributable to owners of the parent) to a unique identifier, the ESEF taxonomy enables:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Comparability</strong> across companies, sectors and jurisdictions.</li> <li><strong>Automation</strong> of data extraction for regulators, analysts and investors.</li> <li><strong>Transparency</strong> because the same concept is presented consistently.</li> <li><strong>Efficiency</strong> in downstream processes such as risk assessment, ESG integration and AIdriven analytics.</li> </ul> <h2>Key Elements of the ESEF Taxonomy</h2> <h3>1. Core Concepts</h3> <p>The taxonomy builds on the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) taxonomy published by the IASB. Core concepts include the balancesheet items (assets, liabilities, equity), incomestatement items (revenues, expenses, profit), cashflow items and equitystatement items. Each concept is identified by a unique tag, for example:</p> <ul> <li><code>ifrs-full_Revenue</code></li> <li><code>ifrs-full_ProfitLoss</code></li> <li><code>ifrs-full_Equity</code></li> </ul> <h3>2. Presentation Tree</h3> <p>The taxonomy defines a hierarchical presentation tree that mirrors the layout of a typical IFRScompliant statement. The tree specifies parentchild relationships so that a tagging engine can automatically rebuild the visual presentation of the report from the underlying XBRL data.</p> <h3>3. Dimensional Tagging</h3> <p>Beyond the core narrative, the taxonomy supports dimensions such as:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Geographical breakdown</strong> (e.g., EU, US, Asia).</li> <li><strong>Business segment</strong> (product lines or subsidiaries).</li> <li><strong>Period</strong> (current year, prior year, interim).</li> </ul> <p>These dimensions enable multidimensional analysis without altering the core statements.</p> <h3>4. Extension Mechanism</h3> <p>Companies can add their own <em>extensions</em> to the taxonomy for items not covered by the core IFRS conceptsfor instance, specific regulatory disclosures or internal performance metrics. Extensions must follow strict naming conventions and be published as part of the ESEF filing.</p> <h3>5. Validation Rules</h3> <p>To guarantee data quality, the taxonomy includes an extensive set of XBRL validation rules (XBRL Formula, linkbase checks, calculation consistency). When a filing is submitted to the national competent authority (NCA), automated validation checks confirm that tags are used correctly, calculations balance, and required disclosures are present.</p> <h2>How Companies Use the Taxonomy</h2> <ol> <li><strong>Mapping</strong>: The finance team maps each line item in the draft IFRS statement to an appropriate taxonomy tag.</li> <li><strong>Tagging</strong>: Using XBRLaware software, tags are embedded in the Inline XBRL (iXBRL) document, preserving both humanreadable HTML and machinereadable XBRL.</li> <li><strong>Validation</strong>: The iXBRL file is run through the ESEF validation engine. Errors must be corrected before submission.</li> <li><strong>Submission</strong>: The final iXBRL file is uploaded to the countrys ESEF portal (e.g., the French AMF, German BaFin). The filing becomes publicly available on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) repository.</li> </ol> <h2>Benefits for Stakeholders</h2> <h3>Regulators</h3> <p>Regulators obtain a harmonised data set that can be queried automatically, reducing manual review time and enabling quicker enforcement actions.</p> <h3>Investors & Analysts</h3> <p>Analysts can download bulk data, apply quantitative models, and compare companies without the need for manual data entry or reconciliation.</p> <h3>Companies</h3> <p>Standardised tagging reduces the risk of misinterpretation, lowers the cost of data provision to third parties, and prepares firms for future digitalreporting initiatives (e.g., ESG taxonomy integration).</p> <h2>Future Developments</h2> <p>The ESEF taxonomy is not static. ESMA publishes annual updates that incorporate new IFRS standards, refinements to existing concepts, and additional dimensions for emerging reporting needs such as sustainability. Companies are encouraged to monitor the <a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu" target="_blank">ESMA website</a> and the <a href="https://xbrl.org" target="_blank">XBRL International portal</a> for the latest versions.</p> <h2>Getting Started Quick Checklist</h2> <ul> <li>Download the latest ESEF taxonomy package from ESMA.</li> <li>Identify core IFRS concepts that match your financial statements.</li> <li>Determine if any extensions are required and design them according to the naming rules.</li> <li>Choose an iXBRLcompatible authoring tool (e.g., CoreFiling, DataTracks, UBmatrix).</li> <li>Run the builtin validator before submission.</li> <li>Submit the final iXBRL file to your national regulator before the filing deadline.</li> </ul> <p>By embracing the ESEF taxonomy, companies not only comply with EU law but also unlock the value of transparent, comparable, and machinereadable financial data.</p></div>