About the author: Max Faivre
Product Marketing Manager

In 2026, Solvency II compliance is no longer just a regulatory exercise. It is a data challenge at scale.
With the rollout of the 2025-2 directive, insurance and mutual organizations are operating under stricter supervision, expanded reporting requirements, and increased focus on long-term investments and ESG risks.
Regulators are not only expecting accurate reports. They expect insurers to prove how every number is built, where the data comes from, and how it is controlled across systems.
This shift changes everything. Compliance is no longer about producing outputs. It is about controlling the full data lifecycle behind them.
Many insurers still rely on fragmented processes, combining legacy systems, Excel files, and manual reconciliations to produce Solvency II reports.
This approach creates three major risks:
As reporting complexity increases, these limitations become unsustainable.
In 2026, regulators expect continuous transparency, not last-minute justification.
Solvency II is structured around three pillars, all deeply dependent on data governance capabilities.
Key metrics such as the Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR) and Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR) depend entirely on the accuracy and consistency of underlying data.
Any data quality issue directly impacts financial ratios and regulatory exposure.
The Own Risk and Solvency Assessment requires a clear understanding of risks across the organization.
This is only possible if data is properly documented, owned, and controlled across systems.
Without visibility into data flows, risk management remains incomplete.
Regulatory reports such as QRT and FSCR demand full transparency.
It is not enough to produce the correct figures. Insurers must be able to explain:
This is where most organizations struggle.
In 2026, data lineage has become a critical capability for Solvency II compliance.
It allows organizations to visually trace the full journey of data, from source systems to final reporting outputs. This includes transformations, aggregations, and business rules applied along the way.
With proper lineage, insurers can:
Without it, every audit becomes a manual investigation.
To address these challenges, insurers are adopting platforms like DataGalaxy.
DataGalaxy centralizes data knowledge across the organization, connecting business definitions, data ownership, policies, and technical assets in one shared environment.
This creates a clear link between regulatory requirements and the data that supports them.
Its automated data lineage capability provides end-to-end visibility across systems, from legacy platforms to modern data stacks. This drastically reduces the effort required to validate reports and respond to audits.
In addition, DataGalaxy integrates with data quality tools such as Soda, Sifflet, and Bigeye, allowing teams to monitor and document data reliability over time.
In 2026, leading insurers are moving beyond reactive compliance.
By structuring data governance with platforms like DataGalaxy, they transform Solvency II into a controlled, repeatable, and scalable process.
The benefits are immediate:
More importantly, they gain a deeper understanding of their data, enabling better risk management and strategic decision-making.
Solvency II is no longer just a constraint. With the right data foundation, it becomes a driver of operational excellence.