The digital reporting standard for business and government
The non-profit community improving U. S. reporting through a free, open standard
The non-profit community improving U. S. reporting through a free, open standard
The XBRL community has begun laying the groundwork for a new technical specification making XBRL easier to learn, aligned with today’s development community, and even better for artificial intelligence.
Work focused on identifiying, and responding to the evolving needs among the software, data consumer and regulatory communities.
Join the growing number of professionals using the XBRL application programming interface (API) to get reported data and check reports before filing.
Check out our growing collection of free resources, including:
To meet the goals of climate initiatives worldwide requires governments to understand the impact of industry on the environment. This can only be accomplished through standardized, digital data that is concretely understood, timely, and consistently prepared to foster a shared understanding of the current state of climate risk and to monitor changes going forward.
Looking for resources to help students and colleagues understand the most significant development in accounting since double entry?
The XBRL US Academic Subcommittee is sharing materials designed to provide an overview of standardized data, generate discussion about its benefits as a research tool and get deep in the data with case studies, tools and scripts for analyzing data submitted to US and European regulators.
Public company accountants, financial service professionals, data providers, technologists, federal regulators and a growing number of industry groups view XBRL as an important component of transparency in the markets. These organizations support the business reporting standard by collaborating on XBRL US initiatives with other like-minded organizations and individuals. Learn about membership options for individuals and organizations and get started today.
The national consortium for
the business reporting standard