California’s climate disclosure laws are no longer theoretical. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) adopted final SB 253 regulations in February 2026, and the first filing deadline lands on August 10, 2026. That’s less than four months from today. ~4,160 entities appear on CARB’s preliminary list across both SB 253 and SB 261, according to the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance. Many of those companies haven’t started preparing.
This guide walks you through seven concrete steps to achieve SB 253 compliance, from scoping and data audits to CARB registration and assurance planning. Whether you’re building from scratch or filling gaps in existing reporting, these steps will get you filing-ready before the deadline.
Related: For a full overview of the law, see our complete guide to California SB 253.
- The first SB 253 filing deadline is August 10, 2026, covering reporting year 2025 emissions.
- Companies with $1B+ revenue doing business in California are in scope; ~4,160 entities are on CARB’s preliminary list across both SB 253 and SB 261 (Harvard Law Forum).
- Scope 3 is the biggest hurdle: 83% of companies struggle with data access (TCFD Status Report, cited in WRI/GHG Protocol analysis).
- No assurance is needed for 2026, but limited assurance for Scope 1 and 2 starts in 2027.
- Non-compliance penalties reach $500,000 per year.
Source: Based on CARB SB 253 final regulations (Feb 2026) and GHG Protocol methodology
Why Can’t You Afford to Wait on SB 253 Compliance?
The August 10, 2026 deadline is now fewer than 120 days away, and CARB adopted its final regulations in February 2026 (CARB, 2026). Companies that haven’t started face a real risk of non-compliance. The maximum penalty under the California statute is $500,000 per reporting year.
But the financial penalty isn’t even the biggest concern. Companies filing late or inaccurately will have their non-compliance status publicly visible. In a market where investors, customers, and regulators are watching climate disclosures closely, that reputational damage compounds quickly.
Here’s what makes this especially urgent: Scope 3 emissions reporting can’t be assembled in a few weeks. It requires supplier engagement, methodology decisions, and data collection across multiple business functions. Organizations that started six months ago are still working through it. So if you haven’t started? You’re already behind, but not too late.
Step 1: How Do You Determine If You’re In Scope?
~4,160 entities appear on CARB’s preliminary list across both SB 253 and SB 261, per the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance. Two revenue thresholds matter here: $1 billion for SB 253 (emissions disclosure) and $500 million for SB 261 (climate risk reporting).
Revenue and “Doing Business in California”
Revenue is measured at the parent-entity level. If your parent company exceeds the threshold, subsidiaries are included. The 50% ownership rule applies: if a parent owns 50% or more of an entity, that entity’s emissions roll up into the parent’s report.
“Doing business in California” is defined broadly. It includes companies headquartered in California, registered to do business there, or meeting California’s tax nexus standards. You don’t need a physical office in the state to be in scope.
Check the CARB Preliminary List
CARB published a preliminary list of in-scope entities in early 2026. Check it. If your company appears on it, you’re expected to report. If you believe you’re listed in error, CARB has a process to request removal, but the burden of proof is on you. Don’t wait until July to start that conversation.
Related: Understand how SB 253 and SB 261 differ in our SB 253 vs SB 261 comparison guide.
Step 2: How Should You Audit Your Current Emissions Data?
Most companies already track Scope 1 and 2 emissions with some degree of rigor. The real question is whether that data meets the GHG Protocol methodology standards that SB 253 requires. According to MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, 2025, 66.1% of companies still rely on spreadsheets for Scope 3 tracking.
What to Look For in Your Audit
Start with a gap analysis. Map what data you currently collect against what SB 253 requires. For Scope 1 and 2, check whether your emission factors are current, your organizational boundaries are clearly defined, and your calculation methodologies align with GHG Protocol standards.
For Scope 3, the gap is usually much wider. Most companies have bits and pieces: maybe business travel data from expense reports, or some purchased goods estimates from procurement. But a structured, category-by-category inventory? That’s rare. Identify which of the 15 Scope 3 categories you’ve already addressed and which ones need work.
In conversations with sustainability teams, we’ve found that roughly 70% of ESG team time goes toward collecting data rather than analyzing it. That ratio needs to flip if you want to meet the deadline without burning out your team.Step 3: How Do You Tackle Scope 3 (The Hard Part)?
Scope 3 emissions represent 70% to 90% of a company’s total carbon footprint, according to CDP. Supply chain emissions are, on average, 26 times higher than a company’s direct operational emissions. Yet 83% of companies report difficulty accessing the Scope 3 data they need (TCFD Status Report, cited in WRI/GHG Protocol analysis).
This is, without question, where most companies get stuck. So how do you make progress without getting paralyzed?
Start with Material Categories
The GHG Protocol defines 15 Scope 3 categories. You don’t need perfect data across all 15 on day one. Start with the categories that are most material to your business. For most companies, these include:
- Category 1: Purchased Goods and Services (often the largest by volume)
- Category 6: Business Travel (data is usually accessible from travel management systems)
- Category 7: Employee Commuting (survey-based estimates work here)
- Category 4: Upstream Transportation (logistics providers often have emissions data)
Sources: TCFD Status Report (cited in WRI/GHG Protocol analysis); MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, 2025
Estimation vs. Primary Data
Here’s the pragmatic truth: you’ll use estimation methods for most Scope 3 categories in your first reporting year. Spend-based calculations, industry-average emission factors, and proxy data are all accepted under the GHG Protocol. The key is documenting your methodology clearly so you can improve data quality over time.
Primary data from suppliers is the gold standard, but getting it requires a supplier engagement strategy. Start reaching out to your top 20 suppliers by emissions impact. Even if they can’t provide precise data now, establishing the relationship creates a pathway for better data in future reporting cycles.
Many companies treat Scope 3 as a single monolithic challenge. It’s not. It’s 15 separate data problems, each with different data sources, methodologies, and difficulty levels. Breaking it into individual workstreams with assigned owners transforms an overwhelming task into a manageable project plan.Source: GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard
Step 4: What Should You Look for in a Reporting Platform?
With 66.1% of companies still using spreadsheets for Scope 3 tracking (MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, 2025), the case for a dedicated platform is strong. Spreadsheets break down when you need audit trails, multi-user collaboration, automated emission factor application, and assurance-ready outputs.
So what separates a useful SB 253 reporting platform from a glorified spreadsheet? Here’s what matters.
Essential Platform Features
- Multi-framework support: SB 253 doesn’t exist in isolation. Your platform should handle CDP, CSRD, and TCFD alignment simultaneously.
- Emission factor libraries: Built-in, regularly updated emission factor databases reduce manual research and calculation errors.
- Assurance-ready outputs: Even though assurance isn’t required until 2027, your platform should generate audit trails from day one.
- API integrations: Connecting to ERP, procurement, and travel systems automates data collection and reduces that 70% time-on-collection problem.
- Scope 3 category coverage: The platform should support all 15 categories with appropriate calculation methodologies for each.
Based on insights from sustainability leaders across multiple industries, teams using dedicated ESG platforms cut their data collection time by roughly half compared to spreadsheet-based approaches. That time savings compounds every reporting cycle.
Step 5: How Should You Plan for Third-Party Assurance?
Good news first: no third-party assurance is required for the 2026 filing. But limited assurance for Scope 1 and 2 emissions kicks in starting 2027, with reasonable assurance required by 2030 (CARB, 2026). Assurance costs range from $150,000 to $500,000 per engagement, according to EcoVadis.
Why plan now if it’s not required yet? Two reasons.
Big 4 Capacity Constraints
The Big 4 accounting firms and major assurance providers are already facing capacity constraints. Between CSRD in Europe, SEC climate rules, and now SB 253, the demand for climate assurance services is surging. Companies that wait until late 2026 to engage assurance providers may find themselves in a queue.
Assurance-Ready Processes Save Money
Building assurance-ready processes into your first filing, even though it’s not required, dramatically reduces costs when mandatory assurance arrives. This means clean audit trails, documented methodologies, clear data ownership, and version-controlled calculations. Retrofitting these practices onto messy first-year data is far more expensive than building them in from the start.
Source: CARB SB 253 Final Regulations, February 2026
Step 6: Why Is Internal Governance Critical for SB 253 Readiness?
CARB estimates annual compliance costs between $135,000 and $152,000 for in-scope companies (CARB). A significant portion of that cost comes from coordination failures, duplicated effort, and unclear ownership of data collection responsibilities across departments.
Climate disclosure isn’t just a sustainability team problem. It requires finance, operations, procurement, and legal to work together. Without clear governance, things fall through the cracks.
Assign Data Owners Per Scope 3 Category
Each of the 15 Scope 3 categories pulls data from a different part of the business. Purchased goods data lives in procurement. Business travel data sits in expense management. Employee commuting data might require HR to run a survey. Assign a named data owner for each category, with clear deadlines and data format requirements.
Establish Board Oversight and Review Cycles
Board-level oversight signals organizational commitment and ensures resources get allocated. Establish quarterly review cycles where data owners present progress, flag gaps, and escalate blockers. This cadence also prepares your organization for the ongoing annual reporting cycle that SB 253 requires.
Step 7: How Do You File with CARB?
The annual filing fee for SB 253 reporting is approximately $3,106 per entity, according to Inside Energy & Environment. Registration happens through the CARB portal, and the reporting format is still being finalized based on guidance from CARB’s March 2026 workshop.
Registration and Filing Process
Register on the CARB portal as early as possible. The registration process requires company identification details, organizational boundary definitions, and contact information for your designated reporting officer. Don’t leave this for the last week before the deadline.
CARB is developing standardized reporting templates based on feedback from its March 2026 workshop. Keep an eye on CARB’s website for template releases. Early registration also ensures you receive any updates or clarifications directly from the agency.
What Are the Most Common SB 253 Compliance Mistakes?
With 53% of companies citing lack of standardized methodologies as a challenge (MIT Sloan, 2025), mistakes are predictable. Most stem from underestimating complexity, not from lack of intent. Here are the ones we see most often.
Waiting Until 2026 to Start
The most expensive mistake is also the most common. Scope 3 data collection alone takes 3 to 6 months for most organizations. If you’re starting now, in April 2026, you’re working on a compressed timeline. It’s doable, but there’s no margin for error.
Ignoring Scope 3 Until 2027
Some companies plan to file minimal Scope 3 data in 2026 and “figure it out” for 2027. The problem? Assurance providers will evaluate your 2027 data against your 2026 baseline. Inconsistent methodologies between years create audit complications and potential restatement risk.
Not Checking CARB’s Preliminary List
Some companies assume they’re not in scope without actually checking. Others discover they’re listed and need to file a correction. Either way, checking the list early gives you time to respond.
Treating SB 253 in Isolation
SB 253 overlaps significantly with CSRD, CDP, and TCFD. Companies that build separate reporting workflows for each framework waste resources. A unified data collection process, mapped to multiple frameworks, is far more efficient.
The companies best positioned for SB 253 aren’t the ones with the biggest sustainability teams. They’re the ones that recognized climate disclosure as a cross-functional data management challenge, not a reporting exercise, and organized accordingly.How Can You Streamline SB 253 Compliance?
Credibl ESG is an AI-powered sustainability management platform built for exactly this kind of multi-framework reporting challenge. It automates Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions calculations using built-in emission factor libraries, generates assurance-ready audit trails, and maps your data to SB 253, CSRD, CDP, and TCFD requirements simultaneously.
The platform connects to ERP, procurement, and travel systems through API integrations, reducing the manual data collection burden that consumes so much team time. For companies on a compressed SB 253 timeline, it provides pre-built Scope 3 category templates and guided workflows that accelerate the process from months to weeks.
Frequently Asked Questions About SB 253 Compliance
When is the first SB 253 filing deadline?
The first SB 253 filing deadline is August 10, 2026, for reporting year 2025 emissions. CARB adopted the final regulations in February 2026. Companies must register on the CARB portal and submit Scope 1, 2, and 3 greenhouse gas emissions data by this date.
What is the revenue threshold for SB 253?
SB 253 applies to companies with annual revenues exceeding $1 billion that do business in California. SB 261 has a lower threshold of $500 million and requires climate-related financial risk reports. Revenue is calculated at the parent-entity level using a 50% ownership threshold.
Do I need third-party assurance for the 2026 filing?
No. Third-party assurance isn’t required for the initial 2026 filing. Limited assurance for Scope 1 and 2 emissions begins in 2027. Reasonable assurance for Scope 1 and 2 starts in 2030. However, building assurance-ready processes now will reduce costs later, with assurance engagements costing $150,000 to $500,000 (EcoVadis).
What are the penalties for non-compliance with SB 253?
The maximum penalty for SB 253 non-compliance is $500,000 per year, as defined in the California statute. Penalties apply to late filings, material misstatements, and failure to report. Companies also face reputational risk from public disclosure of non-compliance.
How much does SB 253 compliance cost?
CARB estimates annual compliance costs between $135,000 and $152,000 for in-scope companies. Third-party assurance adds $150,000 to $500,000 per engagement (EcoVadis). The CARB annual filing fee is approximately $3,106 (Inside Energy & Environment). Total costs vary based on company size and data maturity.
What Should You Do Right Now?
SB 253 compliance isn’t a single task. It’s a cross-functional project that touches data systems, supplier relationships, governance structures, and financial planning. The companies that treat it as such, and start now, will file confidently on August 10. The ones that treat it as “just another report” will scramble.
Your next steps are clear: check the CARB preliminary list, audit your existing emissions data, assign Scope 3 category owners, and evaluate whether your current tools can handle the reporting requirements. If spreadsheets are your primary tool, it’s time to upgrade. If your Scope 3 data has gaps, start with material categories and build from there.
The deadline won’t move. But with a structured approach, four months is enough time to get it done right.
Related: See the full SB 253 and SB 261 reporting timeline to plan your compliance calendar through 2030.




