SB 253 Reporting Deadline Delayed to November 2026

SB 253 reporting deadline

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The SB 253 reporting deadline just moved. If your sustainability or finance team has been working backward from August 10, that date no longer applies. On June 24, 2026, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) announced it would push the SB 253 reporting deadline to November 10, 2026 — a three-month extension — while it revises parts of the implementing regulation.

Nothing else about the law changed. The $1 billion revenue threshold still applies. Scope 1 and Scope 2 are still the first numbers due. Scope 3 still arrives in 2027.

This update is easy to misread as a green light to slow down. It isn’t. Here’s what actually happened, what stayed the same, and what to do with the extra twelve weeks.

Quick Answer: The New SB 253 Reporting Deadline

CARB extended the SB 253 reporting deadline for Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions from August 10, 2026 to November 10, 2026.

The agency also withdrew its rulemaking package from the Office of Administrative Law (OAL) so it can propose “limited changes” to the regulation. Those changes will go through a 15-day public comment period before resubmission.

The reporting obligation itself is unchanged. Who’s covered, what’s due, and the 2027 start date for Scope 3 all stay exactly as written into the law.

What Changed: The New SB 253 Reporting Deadline

CARB’s June 24 bulletin confirmed one specific change. The SB 253 reporting deadline for Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions moves from August 10, 2026 to November 10, 2026.

That’s the entire substance of the announcement. There’s no change to who must report, what they must report, or when Scope 3 reporting begins.

Original PlanUpdated Plan (June 24, 2026)
Scope 1 & 2 reporting deadlineAugust 10, 2026November 10, 2026
Companies in scopeU.S. entities with >$1B revenue doing business in CAUnchanged
Reporting year coveredFY2025Unchanged
Scope 3 reporting starts2027Unchanged
First-year enforcementGood-faith effort standard, no penaltiesUnchanged
Regulation statusSubmitted to OALWithdrawn from OAL pending revisions

The driver behind the new SB 253 reporting deadline is procedural, not substantive. CARB had already sent its approved regulation to the Office of Administrative Law for review.

To make “limited changes” intended to clarify reporting requirements, the agency had to pull that package back. Since OAL approval could now land later than planned, CARB decided to give reporting entities more runway after the final rule is in place.

Why CARB Delayed the Deadline

CARB’s own language frames this as a clarity move, not a relief measure. The agency said the deferral “will help ensure reporting entities have additional clarity following approval of the final regulation before reporting is due.”

In plain terms: rather than lock companies into reporting under a regulation that’s still being revised, CARB is sequencing things so the final rule lands first and the deadline follows.

This matters for how teams should read the signal. It isn’t CARB stepping back from enforcement. It isn’t a sign that further extensions are likely either.

The agency has held a hard line on the underlying statutory deadlines through multiple workshops over the past year, even when the rulemaking process itself ran behind schedule. Timelines for the regulation slip. Reporting dates set in the law move only when CARB explicitly says so, and only by the amount it specifies.

What Hasn’t Changed About the SB 253 Reporting Deadline

It’s worth being precise here. The parts of SB 253 that didn’t move are the parts that actually drive most of the compliance workload.

  • The $1 billion threshold. Any U.S.-based company with total annual revenue above $1 billion that does business in California is still in scope, regardless of where its headquarters sits.
  • Scope 1 and Scope 2 first. The first report still covers direct emissions and emissions from purchased energy for fiscal year 2025.
  • Scope 3 in 2027. Value chain emissions reporting — typically the largest and hardest category to defend — is still scheduled to begin the following year.
  • Good-faith enforcement standard. CARB has previously said it won’t penalize companies for good-faith efforts in the first reporting cycle. That posture remains in place.
  • SB 261 stays separate. SB 261, the climate-related financial risk law, isn’t part of this extension. Its status is unchanged and worth tracking on its own.

SB 253 vs. SB 261: Two Laws, Two Very Different Tracks

It’s easy to conflate California’s two climate disclosure laws since they were signed together and are both administered by CARB. Right now, they’re on noticeably different paths.

SB 253 (Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act)SB 261 (Climate-Related Financial Risk Act)
What it requiresGHG emissions disclosure (Scope 1, 2, then 3)Disclosure of climate-related financial risks and mitigation measures
Legal statusProceeding; deadline just extendedUnder a Ninth Circuit preliminary injunction
Current CARB stanceActive reporting obligation, with extended deadlineCompliance made voluntary while litigation continues
Voluntary activityN/A — mandatoryOver 170 companies have voluntarily filed reports to CARB’s public docket as of late June 2026

The takeaway: don’t let SB 261’s legal uncertainty create a false sense that SB 253 is similarly unsettled. SB 253 implementation is continuing. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit specifically allowed it to proceed even as it paused SB 261.

California’s Climate Disclosure Timeline So Far

For teams that joined this process partway through, here’s the condensed version of how California got here.

DATE
MILESTONE
2023
SB 253 and SB 261 signed into law by Governor Newsom.
Later amendment
SB 219 clarifies and adjusts implementation details.
February 2026
CARB approves the formal SB 253/SB 261 regulation.
May 20, 2026
CARB submits the approved regulation to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL).
June 24, 2026
CARB withdraws the OAL submission, announces a three-month deadline extension, and plans a 15-day public comment period on limited changes.
August 10, 2026 →
November 10, 2026
First SB 253 Scope 1 & Scope 2 reporting deadline, as revised.
2027
Scope 3 emissions reporting begins under SB 253.

What to Do Before the SB 253 Reporting Deadline

A three-month extension is genuinely useful only if it’s spent on the things that were actually slowing teams down. A few priorities worth focusing on:

  • Use the comment period. CARB plans to release proposed regulatory changes for public comment before resubmitting to OAL. Reading that draft closely — and submitting comments where requirements are ambiguous — is a direct way to shape the final rule rather than just react to it.
  • Keep building the Scope 1 and 2 inventory. The reporting year is still FY2025. Extending the deadline doesn’t change which year’s data is due; it just gives more time to validate it.
  • Get ahead of Scope 3 now. 2027 sounds distant until a team starts mapping supplier data sources. Scope 3 typically represents the largest share of a company’s footprint and the hardest data to defend under scrutiny.
  • Document your good-faith effort. CARB’s first-year enforcement posture rewards demonstrable effort, not perfect numbers. A documented process — data sources, assumptions, gaps, and a plan to close them — is what that standard is actually asking for.
  • Track SB 261 separately. Don’t let its injunction status bleed into planning for SB 253. They’re legally distinct, and conflating them is one of the more common compliance mistakes right now.

How Sprih Helps You Meet the SB 253 Reporting Deadline

Building a defensible Scope 1 and 2 inventory — and getting ahead of Scope 3 before it becomes mandatory — depends on having traceable, supplier-specific data rather than generic estimates. Sprih’s AI engine, SustainSense, processes data from over 400,000 sustainability reports across 150,000+ companies to extract supplier-specific emission figures instead of spend-based proxies, and it does this without sending suppliers another questionnaire. For SB 253 reporting specifically, that means Scope 1 and 2 data your team can stand behind under CARB’s good-faith standard, with the underlying audit trail already built in rather than reconstructed after the fact. Sprih’s regulatory mapping also covers CSRD, EUDR, and California’s reporting timelines natively, so the same dataset that supports SB 253 doesn’t need to be rebuilt for every other framework your company reports under.

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