What the 2026 GRESB Updates Mean: Our Observations on the Key Shifts

Change is on the horizon. The 2026 GRESB Real Estate Standard marks a decisive move toward measurable, performance-based climate action. Rather than incremental adjustments, these updates focus attention on the issues that most directly shape long-term value and resilience. GRESB is moving beyond foundational ESG reporting to emphasize accountability for the outcomes that matter most.

Here are the four key changes that stand out to us in the 2026 submission:

1. Embodied Carbon Takes Center Stage

The most significant change is the full scoring of embodied carbon, the emissions tied to a building’s materials and construction process. Until now, the focus has largely been on operational energy. By introducing a new five-point indicator for embodied carbon in the Development component, GRESB is expanding the lens to capture the entire life-cycle impact of assets.

There is also an unscored embodied carbon indicator for Standing Investments that asks whether entities perform asset-level risk assessments for new acquisitions. Although it is not yet scored, its inclusion signals where the standard is headed. Developers and owners will need to consider carbon impacts from design through construction if they intend to lead.

2. Net-Zero Targets: More Credible and Accountable

GRESB continues to refine how net-zero commitments are evaluated. The latest updates prioritize transparency and alignment with recognized global climate pathways.

More importantly, reporting is moving from aspiration to asset-level accountability: participants must now identify which assets within their portfolio are covered by their entity-level net-zero targets. This level of detail allows investors to assess how credible and comprehensive a firm’s climate transition plan really is.

3. Climate Risk Scoring Carries More Weight

GRESB has streamlined its scoring for some foundational risk management indicators while doubling down on climate-related risk. The scoring weight for the main climate risk management indicators has doubled from 2 points to 4 points. The reallocation underscores the material importance of addressing climate threats to long-term asset value.

The 2026 update introduces a more technically robust foundation for assessing both transitional and physical risks (RM5). GRESB has adopted the latest from the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) and will phase out the CRREM 2∘C scenario. The move ensures that participants are using the most current and scientifically supported models to understand their exposure.

Conservice clients can take this further through our Climate Risk Dashboard, powered by Munich Re. The dashboard allows users to view portfolio-level exposure to floods, storms, wildfires, and other natural hazards, compare properties across geographies, and model climate scenarios over different time horizons. These insights help clients manage the same risks GRESB now prioritizes, using real data instead of assumptions.

4. Green Lease Strengthen Landlord-Resident Collaboration

Achieving performance goals is impossible without engaging the people who occupy the buildings. The 2026 Standard increases the focus on genuine collaboration, emphasizing that the “green lease” is the key to unlocking operational performance.

The scoring weight for key tenant engagement indicators-including green leases and fit-out or refurbishment programs-has increased, from 1.5 points to 2.5 points each. Landlords will now need active partnerships with tenants to meet data-sharing, metering, and efficiency goals. Additionally, emissions from landlord-controlled tenant spaces are now classified under Scopes 1 and 2 instead of Scope 3, aligning with the GHG Protocol. This simplifies reporting and reinforces the need for direct action where owners have control.

Streamlining Without Losing Focus

GRESB has retired a few lower-impact management indicators, such as LE3 (individuals responsible for ESG) and SE2.2 (employee engagement programs). Those points have been reallocated to areas with greater potential for measurable climate performance, such as embodied carbon and net-zero outcomes.

If you would like a refresher on how things evolved in the 2025 update, check out our earlier post: What’s New in the GRESB 2025 Portal. That piece helps frame how this year’s changes build on last year’s enhancements and reinforce where trends are heading.

The Bigger Picture

The 2026 GRESB updates are a push forward in how the real estate industry measures and manages climate accountability across the entire asset life cycle. It’s a move from policy to performance, from the materials used in construction to the robust financial scenarios used for risk management. The message is simple: long-term real-estate value depends on climate performance and resilience.Our ESG specialists work directly with clients to interpret new GRESB requirements, align data collection, and strengthen overall sustainability reporting. Contact us to start a conversation about preparing your portfolio for the 2026 GRESB Standard. Connect with a Sustainability Expert

Nicola Helfert

Nicola Helfert

With extensive experience advising global teams on sustainability reporting and corporate sustainability, Nicola has consistently driven the achievement of critical business objectives. A specialist in aligning data with global frameworks (including GRESB, CDP, and GRI), she leads key client deliverables, from Sustainability Reports to Materiality Assessments, for international organizations.

Subscribe To Our Blog Newsletter

Keep yourself ahead of the curve with the latest utility news, trends, & resources.

Editor's Picks

Vacant Cost Recovery (VCR): The Complete 2026 Guide

March 12, 2026

Under the right circumstances, pressure creates diamonds. In multifamily housing, today’s operating pressure may have the right circumstances for a similar transformation. Rising utility costs, tighter margins, and increased regulatory scrutiny are pushing property managers to uncover efficiencies they may…

New Rules. Same Old Trash. Ask an Expert with Tedd Schonsheck

March 5, 2026

Meet Tedd Schonsheck: Waste strategist. Former Army officer. Recovering retail executive. Now, he’s one of the people dedicated to making sure trash actually works for property owners and managers.

Climate Risk Is Now a Portfolio Allocation Question, Not a Reporting Exercise

March 2, 2026

A practical framework for screening climate risk in multifamily portfolios and identifying market and asset hotspots.

Keep the Heat On: Utility Assistance Resources for Property Teams This Winter

February 9, 2026

Record-breaking cold across the East is driving heating costs higher and putting pressure on residents and property teams alike.. Meanwhile, in our headquarters in Utah, we’re still scanning the mountains for snow (we’re not bitter). But across the country, winter…

Exploring the YoY Energy Price Hikes

February 4, 2026

Why Doing Everything Right Still Costs More First the lightning. Then the thunderclap. Right? The lightning. Over the last 18 months, AI, in all of its many and emerging forms, roared across the U.S. And while cultural and enterprise hesitance…

Onboard Is Now Conservice Internet Management

February 2, 2026

Since 2017, Onboard has been singularly focused on transforming how internet is delivered, supported, and monetized in the real estate industry. We’ve built a platform that simplifies bulk and non-bulk internet programs for owners, enhances the resident experience, and drives…

Senior Living Runs on Care (and Careful Utility Management)

January 27, 2026

Senior living operations exist for one main reason: to support residents. Every role, every process, and every decision ultimately serves people, not just systems. That focus is what makes the industry unique. And it’s also what makes operational strain show up more quickly when something falls out of balance.

The NOI Drain You Can’t See: How Utility Billing Errors Quietly Undermine Portfolio Performance

January 16, 2026

Identify and recover hidden utility billing errors that quietly drain NOI. Learn how a utility bill audit, automation, and expert review improve budget accuracy across multifamily and commercial portfolios.

Mid-Lease Enrollments: You’ve Signed a Bulk Internet Contract—Now What?

January 15, 2026

Signing an internet management contract is a big step forward. You’ve secured better pricing, guaranteed service levels, and one of the most in-demand amenities for your residents. But once the ink is dry, the real work begins: getting residents enrolled.

California AB1414: New Bulk Internet Opt-Out Law—What You Need to Know

November 3, 2025

New Requirements Go Into Effect January 1, 2026 California has officially passed AB1414, a bill that changes how property owners and operators can offer bulk internet services to residents. Beginning January 1, 2026, property owners must allow residents the ability…

Experience Effortless Utility Management and Cost Savings

Connect with us today to discover how our solutions can ease tenant billback, streamline utility management, and reduce your costs and energy usage. Make your utility management smarter and more efficient with Conservice!

contact-block-1 (2)