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ESRS G1: Business Conduct · 2026-5010-final
Disclosure Requirement G1-5

Political Influence & Lobbying

Practical guidance for preparing this disclosure. Use this card to identify datapoints, verify claims and organise supporting evidence. For exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG source.

Dr Ross Kurinko, Sustainability Reporting Trainer
Reviewed by Dr Ross Kurinko · Sustainability Reporting Trainer LRA educational guidance · Not issued or endorsed by EFRAG
To prepare this disclosure
Disclosure focus

This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how it manages political influence and lobbying in practice. In plain terms, it is about whether the organisation has a clear approach to engaging with policymakers, trade bodies, and other political actors, and whether that approach is applied consistently rather than only in a few visible locations or through a single team.

The practical focus is on the organisation’s full footprint: the policies, controls, oversight, and reporting that cover lobbying and political engagement across the business, not just flagship sites or headquarters. It should be clear who is responsible, what activities are covered, and how the organisation makes sure its approach is followed wherever such engagement happens.

This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG source.

Before you start

A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.

Preparation

Key datapoints to prepare

Datapoint What to capture Evidence hint Owner
Total contributions The full amount contributed in the reporting period, using one consistent currency and the same cut-off as the rest of the report. Finance ledger, payment schedules, donation records, and period-end reconciliation to the general ledger. Finance / Treasury
Contributions by country A country split of the contributions total, with each amount assigned to the correct jurisdiction on a consistent basis. Grant or donation register with country coding, payment records, and a reconciliation back to the total contributions figure. Finance / Sustainability reporting
Beneficiary type split A breakdown of recipients by the kind of beneficiary they are, using the organisation’s agreed categories and covering the full population. Beneficiary master list, programme records, and category definitions approved for reporting. Sustainability / Community investment
Material topics The subjects identified as relevant for the report, stated in plain language and aligned to the organisation’s current assessment. Materiality assessment, stakeholder input summary, and the approved reporting topic list. Sustainability / ESG reporting
Governance positions The roles held by the people in scope, described by their actual position titles rather than generic labels. Board or committee roster, appointment letters, and governance structure chart. Company Secretariat / Governance
IRO linkage A clear explanation of how each item connects to the organisation’s identified impacts, risks or opportunities, using the same mapping used in the assessment. IRO register, assessment matrix, and cross-reference table used for report drafting. Sustainability / Risk
Named individuals The specific people identified for this disclosure, with names recorded exactly as held in the approved source list. Approved personnel list, governance records, or nomination papers used for the disclosure. Company Secretariat / HR
Prior roles The roles those individuals held before their current position, using the same job history source and the same definition of prior role for all entries. CVs, appointment files, HR history records, and board papers. HR / Company Secretariat
Relevant period The time window over which the disclosure applies, stated clearly so readers can see when the identified roles or events occurred. Reporting timetable, appointment dates, and the cut-off date used for the disclosure. Company Secretariat / Reporting
+ Show G1-5 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundary first, then decide which contribution items fall inside it. Make sure you can separate the total amount from the country breakdown and the beneficiary category for each item you include.
2Agree the classification rules before you start collecting data. Use the same internal definitions for the subject matter covered, the role held by the people involved, and how each item connects to the relevant impacts or risks.
3Gather support for every reported item from source records. Keep the evidence needed to show the total figure, the country split, the beneficiary type, the topic, the position, the link to the related impacts or risks, the named individuals, their earlier roles, and the relevant time period.
4Compile the disclosure in a way that matches the required fields. Present the numeric total and the related narrative details clearly, and make sure the wording is consistent across the full set of entries.
5Record anything you have left out or adjusted, and explain why. If you have changed a classification, a grouping, or a time reference, note that change so the reader can understand the basis used.
6Check the final draft against the official source before sign-off. Confirm that every required item is covered, the figures and descriptions align with the underlying records, and no required detail has been missed or misstated.
Request the data

Request the political contributions and lobbying register

Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.

What payments, support, or advocacy activity did we record in the period, who or what did they relate to, and how do they connect to our material sustainability issues?

Use your organisation’s own terms first, then map them to the reporting fields. For example, if you track this through a gifts and hospitality log, public affairs tracker, government relations register, or policy engagement file, ask for that source rather than using framework labels in the first message.

Weak request

Please provide the ESRS G1-5 political influence and lobbying data, including all contributions, beneficiaries, topics, positions, IRO links, and individuals with previous roles.

Why it fails: It uses framework language that many teams do not track day to day, so the owner may not know which register, codes, or records to search. It also bundles several concepts without saying what source to pull, what period to cover, or how to identify the items in the organisation’s own records.

Better request

Please send the extract from your public affairs / legal register for [reporting period] covering any payments, support, memberships, sponsorships, or policy engagement activity in [boundary]. Include the amount or value, country, recipient type, topic, position taken, link to our material issues, named individuals, any prior public office/advisory/regulator roles, and the source reference for each line.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for political support and policy engagement data for [reporting period]

Hi [name/team],

We are preparing the sustainability report and need a clean extract from your [source record/system] covering [reporting period] for the [group / entity boundary].

Please share the entries for any payments, support, memberships, sponsorships, or policy engagement activity that were recorded in the period, together with the details below:
- amount or value
- country or jurisdiction
- recipient or beneficiary type
- policy topic or issue area
- position taken or ask made
- link to our material issues, if recorded
- names of any individuals involved
- any previous public office, advisory, or regulator roles held by those individuals
- the date or timeframe of the activity
- the source reference or system ID

If the data sits in more than one place, please include the relevant extracts and note which field comes from which source. A possible LRA training template is attached; please adapt this to your organisation’s own terms and check the official source before sign-off.

Many thanks,
[preparer name]
[team]
[contact details]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name] — could you send the [reporting period] extract from [source record/system] for any political support or policy engagement items in scope for [group/entity boundary]? Please include amount/value, country, recipient type, topic, position taken, link to our material issues, named individuals, any prior public office/advisory/regulator roles, dates, and source ID. Please use your own internal labels and I’ll map them for reporting. Thanks.
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. The company tracks trade association fees, local planning engagement, and policy submissions through a government relations log and finance coding.

Adapted request. Please send the [reporting period] extract from the government relations log and finance codes for any trade association fees, sponsorships, policy submissions, or other public affairs items in [boundary]. Include amount/value, country, recipient type, topic, position taken, link to our material issues, named individuals, any prior public office/advisory/regulator roles, and the source ID.

Example response. The owner returns a table with 14 lines: 6 trade association fees, 3 sponsorships, 4 policy submissions, and 1 meeting series. Each line includes value, country, recipient type, topic, position, material issue link, named individual, prior role, and source reference.

Financial services

Context. The firm records political donations, industry body memberships, and policy advocacy in a legal and external affairs register.

Adapted request. Please provide the [reporting period] extract from the legal and external affairs register for any donations, memberships, or policy advocacy activity in [boundary]. Include amount/value, jurisdiction, beneficiary type, topic, position taken, link to our material issues, named individuals, any prior public office/advisory/regulator roles, and the record reference.

Example response. The owner returns 5 records: 2 membership fees, 1 event sponsorship, and 2 policy submissions. The extract shows the jurisdiction, recipient category, policy topic, stance taken, named participants, prior roles, and the register reference for each item.

Draft your disclosure

Notes that turn data into a disclosure

LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.

Method note

Explain how the figures were compiled, including what counts as a contribution, how recipient types and countries were grouped, how topics and positions were matched to the related impacts, risks or opportunities, and how individuals were identified and the period used for that review.

Context note

Set out what the numbers indicate in practice: where support was directed, which recipient groups received it, what issues were covered, how the organisation responded on those issues, and how the individual-screening process was framed.

Fluctuation statement

If any figures changed materially, note whether the movement came from a shift in geography, a change in recipient mix, a different set of topics or positions, or a wider or narrower review period for identifying individuals.

Content index entry
G1-5 Political Influence & Lobbying — [location / page] / [notes]
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Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for G1-5 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.

Free · Community members
Go deeper · G1-5
Learn to prepare this disclosure end-to-end

This guide covers one Disclosure Requirement. The ESRS / CSRD Reporting course walks the full European workflow — double materiality, datapoints, evidence and assurance — with exercises on your own data.

Available as Guided Flex, Live Cohort, 1:1 Expert Mentorship or Corporate Programme.

Assurance readiness

For each claim, check the evidence

ClaimRiskEvidence to check
We checked that the named people were in post during the year and that any earlier public-sector roles we mentioned were recent enough to be relevant, with the comparison basis recorded in our working papers.An assurer may test whether the roles were actually comparable, whether the dates support the ‘recent’ link, and whether the selection of appointees was complete and unbiased.Board appointment records; CVs or biographies; HR or company secretariat files; a documented comparison note explaining why each prior public role was treated as relevant; approval papers for the final list.
We compiled the money figure from the underlying records for both cash and non-cash support, then reconciled the total to the source schedules before sign-off.An assurer may probe whether all relevant items were captured, whether indirect support was included consistently, and whether the total ties back to the source data without omissions or double counting.General ledger extracts; payment approvals; donation registers; in-kind valuation support; consolidation workbook; reconciliation to the reported total; management review evidence.
We split the reported amount by location using the country or region attached to each item in the source records, and we kept a mapping file showing how each entry was assigned.An assurer may check whether the geographic split is based on a consistent rule, whether any items were allocated to the wrong place, and whether the subtotals add up to the overall figure.Transaction-level listing with location fields; allocation rules; mapping spreadsheet; country/region subtotal reconciliation; exception log for any ambiguous cases.
We identified the recipient category from the supporting documentation for each item and used a consistent classification rule across the period.An assurer may question whether the beneficiary type was described accurately, whether the same type was used consistently for similar items, and whether any mixed or unclear recipients were handled appropriately.Recipient records; invoices or grant letters; classification guidance; review notes for borderline cases; sample trace from source document to reported category.
We prepared the narrative on public-policy engagement from the internal issue tracker and position papers, then checked that the topics we highlighted were the main ones for the period and linked them to the business issues we had already identified as important.An assurer may test whether the selected topics were truly the main ones, whether the stated positions match the underlying advocacy material, and whether the link to the company’s important risks and opportunities is supported rather than asserted.Policy tracker; lobbying or advocacy logs; position papers; issue prioritisation memo; materiality assessment or risk register cross-reference; review and approval trail.
We cross-checked the draft wording against the underlying advocacy records to make sure the positions were described consistently and that no significant topic was left out of the final summary.An assurer may look for completeness, consistency between the narrative and source records, and evidence that the draft was reviewed by the people responsible for the advocacy activity.Draft-to-source comparison mark-up; sign-off emails from policy leads; completeness checklist; meeting minutes showing review of the final wording.

Evidence pack to prepare

Common reporting gaps

Figures are stated without the supporting narrative, or narrative without figures.Scope is inconsistent between the text and the numbers.The reporting boundary is left undefined.Material changes since the previous period are not disclosed.Estimates and measured values are not distinguished.Source records for the figures are not identified.
Common gaps

Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data

Wrong owner
The request goes to the policy team or legal team instead of the business area that actually tracks donations, memberships, and advocacy activity.
Framework language used
People ask for data using disclosure labels rather than the organisation’s own terms, so the source team cannot map the request to its records.
Scope not fixed
The team starts collecting figures without first agreeing which entities, activities, and locations sit inside the reporting boundary.
+ Show 5 more

Where judgement is often needed

Set the group boundary for donations and lobbying spend after deals close
Use the reporting perimeter you have chosen for the rest of the report, then explain whether newly bought or sold entities are included for the full year or only from the date control changed.
Translate local political-payment labels into one group-wide category
Where countries use different legal or accounting labels, map them to a single internal definition for this disclosure and say which local items were grouped together or left out.
Decide whether indirect support counts as a contribution
Make a clear call on items such as trade body fees, event sponsorships, in-kind support or third-party payments, and disclose the rule used to include or exclude them.
+ Show 6 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Consumer goods

During the year, we made external payments of **€1.8 million** in total, split across **€1.1 million in Country A** and **€0.7 million in Country B**. By recipient type, **€1.2 million** went to public bodies, **€0.4 million** to trade associations, and **€0.2 million** to community organisations. - For the policy area covered, the payments related to product safety, packaging regulation, and responsible sourcing. - The people involved in approving or overseeing these payments were two executive directors, one finance lead, and one compliance manager; the finance lead had previously worked in public affairs, and the compliance manager had previously worked in regulatory affairs. - The review period for these disclosures was the 12 months ended 31 December 2025, and the figures above are internally consistent and illustrative only.

This synthetic example shows how a company might describe total external payments, split them by geography and recipient type, and then explain the policy topics, the roles of the people involved, and any relevant prior roles and time period.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Industrial equipment

We recorded **£920,000** of external payments in the reporting year, with **£552,000 in Country C** and **£368,000 in Country D**. Of that total, **£460,000** was paid to government agencies, **£276,000** to industry bodies, and **£184,000** to local charities. - The matters linked to these payments were workplace safety, emissions controls, and supply-chain due diligence. - The individuals who handled approval or oversight were one board member, two senior managers, and one legal counsel; the board member had previously served in government relations, and one senior manager had previously worked in procurement. - These disclosures cover the 2025 financial year and are presented as a fully synthetic, internally consistent example.

This synthetic example shows a different reporter using the same disclosure logic: total external payments, country split, recipient categories, the topics connected to the payments, the relevant roles, and any earlier roles held by those people.

Company reportsReal published reports
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How companies report G1-5 in practice

Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Iberdrola, S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Spain · 2025
Open report →
Iberdrola's 2025 Sustainability Report provides a specific numeric value for its total contribution to the community, amounting to EUR 62.7 million as stated on page 107. There is partial narrative context on page 111 regarding the types of customers covered, indicating inclusivity across sectors and people, but no headline value is given. Notably, no other narrative items relevant to this disclosure are found elsewhere in the report.
EDP, S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Portugal · 2025
Open report →
EDP, S.A.'s 2025 Integrated Annual Report states that the company makes no direct political contributions to political parties, candidates, or campaigns (p.195). The report also mentions lobbying expenses and membership fees to lobbying associations, but the disclosure of these figures and related topics is unclear (p.195). There is no quotable evidence found regarding numeric values or detailed narrative items on political contributions or lobbying beyond this, indicating limited transparency on these aspects.
Amadeus IT Group, S.A.
Hotels, Restaurants, Leisure, Tourism Services · Spain · 2025
Open report →
Amadeus IT Group, S.A.'s 2025 Non-Financial Report provides some related context on political influence and lobbying activities (p.205) and mentions contributions to charities and non-governmental organizations (p.215), but these references do not constitute clear or detailed disclosures. The report also includes financial figures and operational data across various geographical areas (pp.26, 62, 166, 167), though these are not explicitly linked to the disclosure in question. Notably, no direct or numeric evidence specifically addressing the disclosure was found in the report.
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Scenarios to work through

Your group paid a trade association fee of 120,000 in one country and 30,000 in another. The finance team can see the payments, but the sustainability draft only mentions the total.

QHow should you present these amounts so the disclosure is usable for review?
Reveal model answer →

The public affairs team says the company supported a policy paper on carbon pricing and also joined a submission on labour rules. They want the report to say only that the company 'engaged on public policy'.

QWhat level of detail should you capture about the subjects covered and the company’s stance?
Reveal model answer →

A director sits on the board of a sector body that lobbies on energy policy. The draft report names the director but does not say whether the person is there in a personal capacity or because of their company role, and it gives no time period.

QWhat should you confirm before finalising the description of that person’s involvement?
Reveal model answer →

The legal team has a list of three senior staff who represented the company in policy meetings during the year. One joined from government six months before the reporting date, another moved from a regulator two years ago, and the third has no prior public-sector role.

QHow should you decide what to disclose about these individuals?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

ESRS
G1-5
within ESRS G1: Business Conduct
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
Go deeper · G1-5
Learn to prepare this disclosure end-to-end

This guide covers one Disclosure Requirement. The ESRS / CSRD Reporting course walks the full European workflow — double materiality, datapoints, evidence and assurance — with exercises on your own data.

Available as Guided Flex, Live Cohort, 1:1 Expert Mentorship or Corporate Programme.

FAQ

Questions this page answers

For G1-5, what data do I need to gather before I start drafting the disclosure?+
How do I set the scope and relevant period for a G1-5 disclosure using this page?+
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What are the six assurance claims I need to verify for G1-5?+
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How do I use the G1-5 workbook download to prepare the disclosure?+
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