Today the Secretary of State has laid a Report before Parliament pursuant to the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (the REUL Act) and published it on Gov.uk. This Report updates the House in line with the obligations under Section 17 of the REUL Act, which requires a Report to be published and laid before Parliament every six months until 23 June 2026 detailing all revocations and reforms of assimilated law. As this is the final (sixth) Report being laid before the House, section 17 of the REUL Act removes the requirement to set out the Government’s future plans to revoke and reform assimilated law.
The Report today summarises the data on the assimilated law dashboard, providing the public with information about the amount of assimilated law there is and where it sits across departments. The dashboard was updated for the final time on 14 July 2026 and reflects the position as of 23 June 2026, showing a total of 6,921 instruments of REUL / assimilated law concentrated over approximately 400 unique policy areas. Since the previous update to the dashboard, 133 assimilated law instruments have either been revoked or reformed. In addition, departments have undertaken further analysis and amended their record of assimilated law. As a result, a net figure of 2,700 instruments have been revoked or reformed in total. Section 17 of the REUL Act does not require the dashboard to be updated beyond the final reporting period 24 December 2025 to 23 June 2026. As such, tracking and reporting of assimilated law, including publication of the Assimilated Law Dashboard will now end. After a 6-month post publication period, the dashboard will be taken offline and replaced by a downloadable version of the last dataset on gov.uk.
These steps are deemed proportionate as there is no clear policy rationale for continuing to track assimilated law once the statutory requirement expires. Any reforms to assimilated law would be made to truly support Government priorities.
The Report provides details of 46 statutory instruments which were made by the Government using powers under the REUL Act and other domestic legislation since the end of the last reporting period. These statutory instruments amend assimilated law to deliver the Government’s priorities. This includes, for example, The Provision of Services (Amendment and Transitional Provision) Regulations 2026, which supports this Government’s pledge to cut the administrative burden of regulation to business by 25% by the end of this Parliament. This statutory instrument supports an open, transparent, and proportionate licensing regime to reduce costs for business.
On 23 June 2026, the majority of REUL Act powers expired. The Government can continue making changes to assimilated law to support the national interest through other domestic legislation. Looking ahead, the Government will progress reform, where desirable, of assimilated law to ensure regulation creates the conditions for sustainable growth whilst upholding consumer and environmental protections.
https://www.theyworkforyou.com/wms/?id=2026-07-14.hcws233.0
seen at 12:26, 15 July in Written Ministerial Statements.