Pillar Two can make sensible people write nonsense. You see answers packed with acronyms, rule labels, and process steps, and by the end the reader still does not know the one thing they care about.
What does this mean for the company’s tax, cash, and disclosures.
In SBR ACCA, Pillar Two is a gift if you handle it in plain English. It is a current issue with real board pressure, real disclosure risk, and lots of professional marks on offer. It also separates candidates who can explain, apply, and conclude from candidates who only recite technical detail.
This post explains top-up tax in a human way. It shows how to write a clean SBR answer without drowning in jargon. If you want a solid base approach for exam technique and writing under time pressure, use the ACCA exam success guide as your anchor and apply the structure below to every attempt.
Pillar Two in one sentence
Pillar Two aims to make sure large multinational groups pay at least a 15 percent effective tax rate in each country where they operate, with a top-up tax where the local effective rate falls below that level.
That is enough to start an exam answer. You do not need a history lesson.
Why this topic shows up in SBR
SBR is about decision-useful reporting. Pillar Two is a live reporting issue because it affects:
- the tax story in the annual report
- the effective tax rate narrative and trend
- cash tax timing and planning
- governance, controls, and data quality
- how clear and honest disclosures are under uncertainty
It also fits the kind of questions examiners like. They can set a scenario where management is not sure of the numbers yet, the audit committee wants clarity, and the disclosure must be fair, clear, and not misleading.
That is exactly what SBR tests.
The only four questions a user cares about
When you strip the topic down, users of the accounts want answers to four questions:
- Are we exposed to top-up tax and where?
- How big could it be and when might it hit cash?
- How certain is the estimate and what could change it?
- What is the board doing to control it and report it properly?
If your answer covers those four questions, you will usually score well.
The SBR structure that stops you waffling
Use this every time:
Issue – Rule – Apply – Conclude.
- Issue: what decision or disclosure problem exists in this scenario.
- Rule: the plain English requirement, not pages of mechanics.
- Apply: use the scenario facts and focus on impact.
- Conclude: give a direct recommendation and next steps.
This is also how you protect time in exam centres. You always know what you are writing next.
Pillar Two mechanics without the pain
You do not need to explain the full calculation in an SBR answer. You only need enough to show you understand what drives exposure.
The mechanics can be summarised like this:
- You look at the group’s results by jurisdiction.
- You work out an effective tax rate for each jurisdiction using Pillar Two rules.
- If the rate is below 15 percent, a top-up may apply.
- Local rules and safe harbours may reduce the amount or reduce the work required.
You then pivot straight back to the scenario and to the reporting.
Where the exposure usually comes from
In exam scenarios, exposure is usually driven by one or more of these:
- a low statutory tax rate in a key country
- tax holidays, free zones, or large incentives
- material deferred tax movements that change the effective rate
- profits located in one jurisdiction through group structure
- losses in one entity and profits in another within the same country group
- timing differences and unusual items that distort the effective rate
You do not need to list all of these in your answer. You pick the ones that match the scenario.
What you should say about safe harbours and domestic top-ups
Many candidates panic here and either ignore the point or dump too much detail.
Keep it simple.
- Some transitional simplifications may reduce the compliance burden in early years where risk is low.
- Some countries may apply domestic top-up taxes that collect the shortfall locally.
- Even when a simplification applies, management still needs a clear basis and evidence, and the annual report still needs clear disclosure.
One or two sentences like that are enough. Then you return to impact and disclosure.
The accounting angle you can explain without jargon
Pillar Two is a tax topic, but in SBR it is mainly a disclosure and narrative topic.
Your answer should show that you understand the reporting consequences:
- There may be an impact on current tax expense in the year, depending on exposure and timing.
- Disclosure needs to explain exposure, uncertainty, and the likely direction of impact.
- There is a specific point around deferred tax treatment for these top-up taxes that affects how the accounts present the story.
You do not need to overload the marker. One focused paragraph on how it affects the tax note and the effective tax rate story is often enough.
The tax note narrative is where most marks sit
Many Pillar Two questions are really asking: can you write a clean tax disclosure that a board would sign.
A strong narrative should:
- identify the main jurisdictions that drive exposure
- describe the nature of exposure in plain English
- explain whether an estimate is available and how it was prepared
- describe key uncertainties and what could move the number
- explain governance and next steps
This is board language. That is why it earns professional marks.
A model paragraph you can adapt under time pressure
If you are short of time, you can adapt this shape and still score.
The group is within scope of Pillar Two and must assess whether the effective tax rate in each jurisdiction meets the 15 percent minimum. Exposure is most likely in jurisdictions where local tax rates are low or incentives reduce the effective rate. Management should identify the highest-risk locations, estimate the potential top-up where reliable data is available, and explain key uncertainties where an estimate cannot yet be made with confidence. The financial statements should include clear disclosure that links the Pillar Two position to the current year tax narrative and expected cash tax timing, with board oversight of data controls and readiness work.
This paragraph is short, applied, and useful. It is not a technical essay.
How to write a high-scoring answer from scratch
Use the four user questions and build your answer in sections.
Section 1 Scope and exposure
Confirm the group is in scope and then point to where exposure may arise. Keep it tied to scenario facts.
Example tone:
“The group is in scope due to its size and cross-border operations. Exposure is most likely in Country X and Country Y because the scenario indicates low effective tax rates driven by incentives.”
Section 2 Expected impact and timing
If the question gives numbers, you use them. If it does not, you describe direction and uncertainty.
Example tone:
“Management expects some top-up exposure in Country X. The estimate is still being refined because local data is being validated and rules are being interpreted consistently across entities.”
Section 3 Disclosure and consistency with the accounts
Link the story to the tax note and the effective tax rate narrative. Keep it practical.
Example tone:
“The tax note should explain the nature of the exposure, the basis of any estimate, and what could change it. The narrative should be consistent with the effective tax rate bridge and should not imply certainty where data quality is still developing.”
Section 4 Governance and controls
This is where you collect easy professional marks.
Example tone:
“The board should assign clear ownership for Pillar Two calculations, ensure local data is reviewed and documented, and require audit committee oversight of key judgements and disclosures.”
Section 5 Conclusion
Make it decisive. Tell the board what to do next.
Example tone:
“Focus disclosures on the jurisdictions that drive risk, explain uncertainty clearly, and strengthen data controls so reporting becomes more reliable over the next cycle.”
The checklist you can use in the exam
This is the only bullet list in the post. Use it to plan your answer quickly.
- Confirm scope and identify the jurisdictions that drive exposure
- Explain what causes low effective tax rates in those locations
- Describe the expected direction of top-up tax and cash timing
- Be clear on what can be estimated now and what cannot
- Link disclosure to the tax note and effective tax rate story
- Add governance, ownership, evidence, and review steps
- Conclude with a clear recommendation for reporting and next actions
If you cover those seven points, your answer will look board-ready.
A realistic exam scenario and how to handle it
Imagine a case like this:
- The group operates in multiple countries.
- A large part of profit sits in a low-tax jurisdiction.
- There are incentives that reduce the effective tax rate.
- Management is still building the data set and cannot quantify top-up tax precisely.
- The audit committee wants a clear annual report disclosure and a plan.
A weak answer repeats Pillar Two mechanics in long form.
A strong answer focuses on impact and reporting.
You would write:
- Where exposure is likely and why.
- What the direction of impact is and what the uncertainty drivers are.
- What disclosure should say this year.
- What the board should do to improve readiness and controls.
You do not need to quote rule labels. You need to advise.
How to discuss uncertainty without sounding weak
Uncertainty is not a problem if you explain it properly.
A professional disclosure does three things:
- states what is uncertain and why
- states what management is doing to reduce uncertainty
- commits to updating estimates and disclosures as information improves
Avoid vague phrases like “it is complicated”. Replace them with a clear reason tied to the scenario:
“The estimate depends on reliable local data and consistent interpretation across entities, which is still being validated.”
That reads like a real report.
How Pillar Two links to the effective tax rate bridge
This is an easy mark if you keep it simple.
Users look at the effective tax rate and ask: why did it move.
Your answer can say:
- Pillar Two may reduce the benefit of incentives over time.
- It may push the group’s effective tax rate higher in certain locations.
- The annual report should explain whether the group expects a stable new tax profile or a transitional period of uncertainty.
You do not need to build a full bridge in the exam unless asked. You only need to show you understand the story.
How to avoid the most common examiner traps
Trap 1 Writing a technical essay
Fix: lead with purpose, exposure, impact, and disclosure. Keep mechanics short.
Trap 2 Ignoring the scenario
Fix: reference the key jurisdictions, incentives, and data issues given.
Trap 3 No link to the accounts
Fix: include one paragraph that ties the narrative to the tax note and effective tax rate story.
Trap 4 No governance
Fix: add clear ownership, controls, review, and audit committee oversight.
Trap 5 No conclusion
Fix: end with a direct recommendation.
These fixes are simple and they score.
How to practise this topic in 30 minutes
You do not need hours of reading. You need applied writing.
Try this drill:
- Set a timer for 25 minutes.
- Write an answer using the checklist above.
- Spend 5 minutes rewriting the weakest paragraph into 8 to 10 lines using Issue – Rule – Apply – Conclude.
Do this once per week and Pillar Two becomes reliable marks rather than stress.
Resit candidates can gain quickly here
Resit candidates often have enough knowledge to pass, but they do not write to the requirement. Pillar Two questions are ideal practice because they force:
- clear structure
- short applied writing
- careful wording under uncertainty
- professional recommendations
If you are on ACCA resit exams, treat this as a professional marks topic. Your goal is to sound like a board adviser.
Where a course can help
Pillar Two improves fastest with feedback on clarity, structure, and relevance.
If you want a timetable, marked submissions, and mock debriefs that keep you accountable, explore an ACCA SBR course and use this topic as a repeatable writing exercise. The goal is not to become a tax technician. The goal is to produce clear, consistent reporting advice under time pressure.
The calm conclusion you can reuse
Pillar Two is not a topic you win by memorising acronyms. You win it by explaining exposure, impact, uncertainty, and disclosure in a way that helps users understand the tax story. Keep it plain English. Focus on the jurisdictions that drive risk. Link the narrative to the tax note and the effective tax rate. Add governance and next steps. Conclude clearly.
That is how to write Pillar Two answers that score.
