MiFID Vs EMIR Refit Key Overlaps and Differences in UK Reporting
Download our free guide to discover:
- Where dual reporting arises under UK MiFIR and UK EMIR Refit, and why the same derivatives trade can trigger obligations under both regimes
- The key overlaps vs. differences firms need to understand to keep reporting consistent and defensible across both datasets
- The practical impact of running two regimes in parallel, including duplicate processes, heavier reconciliation, and increased risk of inconsistencies
- The most common field-level differences that create operational complexity (including counterparty identification and lifecycle reporting)
- A clear view of the regulatory direction of travel and what current FCA proposals could mean for reporting scope and burden over time
Why this matters
For UK derivatives market participants, overlap between UK MiFIR and UK EMIR Refit is often unavoidable. This guide helps compliance and operations teams understand where the regimes diverge and how to reduce unnecessary operational friction and data risk.
How Qomply can help
Qomply’s Regulatory Reporting Hub combines regulatory expertise with AI, automation and data analytics to deliver scalable, audit-ready reporting intelligence that reduces errors, lowers remediation costs, and minimises operational and regulatory risk.
Covering regimes including MiFIR, EMIR Refit, SFTR, CFTC, CSA, MAS, ASIC and HKMA, Qomply also offers a fully managed service and operates globally from London.
Frequently asked questions
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Compliance, operations, and regulatory reporting teams at UK firms trading derivatives who need to manage reporting under both UK MiFIR and UK EMIR Refit.
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Where dual reporting arises, the highest-impact overlaps and differences, and the operational challenges that typically follow (including reconciliation and dataset consistency).
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Because the regimes serve different regulatory objectives, but derivatives activity can trigger obligations under both frameworks. The guide explains where this overlap occurs and why.
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Yes. It highlights key areas where firms commonly see divergence (such as counterparty identification and lifecycle/event reporting) and why this matters for controls and data quality.
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