
A materiality matrix is the cornerstone of effective ESG reporting. It visualises which sustainability topics matter most to your organisation and stakeholders, informing disclosure priorities and strategy. This template guide walks you through creating a robust materiality matrix aligned with ASRS, TCFD, and GRI requirements.
The materiality matrix transforms complex stakeholder input into a clear prioritisation framework. By plotting topics on two axes—impact significance and financial materiality—you can focus resources on what truly matters while demonstrating transparency in your assessment process.
What Is a Materiality Matrix?
A materiality matrix is a visual tool that plots sustainability topics according to their significance. Traditional single-axis matrices showed only stakeholder concern levels. Under double materiality frameworks like ASRS, modern matrices use two axes:
- X-axis: Impact Significance — How severely your organisation affects people and the environment (inside-out perspective)
- Y-axis: Financial Materiality — How sustainability issues create financial risks and opportunities for your business (outside-in perspective)
Topics that score high on both axes are your most material topics—they require detailed disclosure and strategic attention. Topics low on both may need only brief mention or no disclosure at all.
Why Use a Materiality Matrix?
- Prioritise disclosures: Focus reporting efforts on topics that matter most
- Demonstrate process rigour: Show regulators and stakeholders you have a systematic approach
- Align strategy and reporting: Connect sustainability to business strategy
- Engage stakeholders: Visual tool for discussing priorities with board, investors, and communities
- Meet ASRS requirements: The standard explicitly requires materiality assessment documentation
Materiality Matrix Template
Below is our structured template for creating your materiality matrix. Copy and adapt this framework for your organisation.
Step 1: Topic Identification
List all potential material topics from multiple sources:
| Source | Topics Identified |
|---|---|
| Stakeholder engagement | Topics raised by investors, employees, communities, suppliers |
| Industry standards | SASB, GRI sector standards, industry association guidance |
| Regulatory frameworks | ASRS, TCFD, SEC climate disclosure requirements |
| Risk assessment | Enterprise risk register, climate risk assessments |
| Competitor analysis | Topics disclosed by peers and industry leaders |
Tip: Aim for 15-30 identified topics. Too few suggests incomplete analysis; too many becomes unmanageable.
Step 2: Impact Assessment
For each topic, assess impact significance using these criteria:
| Criterion | Low (1) | Medium (2) | High (3) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scale | Limited, localised impact | Moderate scope | Widespread, systemic impact |
| Scope | Few affected stakeholders | Several stakeholder groups | Many stakeholder groups affected |
| Irremediability | Easily reversible | Difficult to reverse | Permanent or very hard to reverse |
| Likelihood | Unlikely to occur | Possible occurrence | Highly likely or already occurring |
Calculate: Impact Score = Scale × Scope × Irremediability × Likelihood
Normalise to 1-10 scale for matrix plotting.
Step 3: Financial Materiality Assessment
For each topic, assess financial materiality using these criteria:
| Criterion | Low (1) | Medium (2) | High (3) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Magnitude | Minimal financial impact | Moderate financial effect | Significant financial effect |
| Likelihood | Unlikely to materialise | Possible occurrence | High probability |
| Time horizon | Long-term (5+ years) | Medium-term (1-5 years) | Short-term (within 1 year) |
Calculate: Financial Score = Magnitude × Likelihood × Time Factor
Normalise to 1-10 scale for matrix plotting.
Step 4: Matrix Plotting
Create a 2×2 or 3×3 matrix grid:
- X-axis: Impact significance (1-10)
- Y-axis: Financial materiality (1-10)
Quadrant interpretation:
- Top-right (High/High): Most material — priority disclosure, strategic focus
- Top-left (Low Impact, High Financial): Financially significant — include in risk and opportunity disclosures
- Bottom-right (High Impact, Low Financial): Impact-significant — include in impact disclosures
- Bottom-left (Low/Low): Least material — may not require disclosure
Materiality Assessment Template
Use this template to document your assessment:
| Topic | Impact Score (1-10) | Financial Score (1-10) | Average Score | Material? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Climate change mitigation | ||||
| Climate change adaptation | ||||
| Energy consumption | ||||
| Water management | ||||
| Biodiversity | ||||
| Work health and safety | ||||
| Diversity and inclusion | ||||
| Training and development | ||||
| Labour rights | ||||
| Community engagement | ||||
| Governance structure | ||||
| Business ethics | ||||
| Supply chain management | ||||
| Anti-corruption |
Documenting Your Assessment
ASRS and other frameworks require you to document your materiality process. Create a materiality assessment document that includes:
- Stakeholder identification: Who you consulted and why
- Topic sources: Where topics came from
- Assessment methodology: Scoring criteria and rationale
- Topic-by-topic analysis: Evidence for each score
- Stakeholder validation: How stakeholders confirmed results
- Discordant views: Where stakeholders disagreed and how you addressed it
Materiality Threshold
Define a threshold for materiality. Topics meeting this threshold require detailed disclosure:
Example threshold: A topic is material if it scores ≥6 on either axis, or ≥5 on both axes.
Document your threshold rationale and apply it consistently across all topics.
Refreshing Your Materiality Assessment
Materiality isn’t static. Refresh your assessment:
- Annually: Full stakeholder engagement refresh
- Significant changes: Mergers, acquisitions, new markets, regulatory changes
- Emerging topics: New ESG issues arise (e.g., AI governance, biodiversity)
Track changes year-over-year to show stakeholders how your priorities evolve.
Common Pitfalls
- Insufficient topics: Only including what you already report
- Biased scoring: Inflating or deflating scores to achieve desired results
- Missing stakeholders: Not consulting affected communities or supply chain workers
- Static approach: Not updating materiality as context changes
- No threshold: Reporting everything equally without prioritisation
Related Resources
- Double Materiality Assessment Guide for ASRS — Complete methodology for ASRS materiality
- Stakeholder Engagement Methods — How to consult stakeholders effectively
- Materiality Overview — Understanding materiality concepts
Key Takeaways
- A materiality matrix visualises topic priorities for impact and financial significance
- Use consistent scoring criteria across all topics
- Document your assessment process thoroughly for regulatory compliance
- Set a clear materiality threshold to prioritise disclosures
- Refresh materiality annually and when significant changes occur
Ready to apply this template? Start with our Double Materiality Assessment Guide for ASRS for a complete walkthrough.