IFRS.Report
About IFRS.Report
Why IFRS.Report exists, how content is source-verified, and how the platform supports IFRS reporting teams.
In 2023, a sustainability manager at a mid-cap company in Hong Kong spent three weeks preparing her company's first IFRS-aligned sustainability disclosure. She opened the IFRS S1 standard and read 86 paragraphs. She opened the IFRS S2 standard and read 36 paragraphs. She cross-referenced them with the SASB industry guidance for her sector. She collected data from finance, operations, legal, and procurement. She drafted answers. She sourced evidence. She compiled a report. When she finished, she had a document — but no way to prove that every answer was correct, every source was verified, and every disclosure was complete.
That was the problem IFRS.Report was built to solve. The platform is a structured reference tool for IFRS S1 and S2 sustainability disclosure. It provides the standards in context: every paragraph, every requirement, every industry metric. It captures source evidence and links it to every disclosure. It uses AI to assist with drafting, but never overwrites human input. It generates reports aligned with IFRS S1, S2, and SASB industry metrics. The three weeks of work becomes a single, auditable, source-verified disclosure.
IFRS.Report is not affiliated with the IFRS Foundation or the ISSB. It is built on the standards they publish. Every piece of content on this site is sourced from IFRS S1, IFRS S2, SASB industry guidance, or named regulatory sources. Every citation is verified against the source document. The sustainability manager in Hong Kong no longer spends three weeks compiling evidence. She spends three hours reviewing it.
IFRS.Report exists to make IFRS compliance accessible — standards reference, evidence capture, and AI-assisted drafting in one platform.
In Plain Language
- IFRS.Report exists to make IFRS compliance accessible — standards reference, evidence capture, and AI-assisted drafting in one platform.
- Every piece of content is sourced from IFRS S1, IFRS S2, SASB industry guidance, or named regulatory sources — verified against the original document.
- The practical test is whether a reporting team can reduce three weeks of evidence compilation to three hours of review — with every disclosure traceable to its source.
Technical Requirements
- Platform origin & mission statement
- Source verification methodology
- AI governance framework overview
- Not-for-profit independent status