Your SAP system records every asset purchase. It runs depreciation on schedule. It produces the reports your auditors ask for. What it does not do, by default, is track what happens to an asset after it is capitalized.
IAS 16 paragraphs 43 through 47 require component accounting: when a significant part of a fixed asset is replaced, the old component must be derecognized and the new one capitalized separately. That is not optional guidance. It is a mandatory requirement for any organization reporting under IFRS.
SAP Plant Maintenance tracks work orders. SAP Fixed Assets tracks financial asset records. These two modules are not enforced to stay in sync by default. Every component replacement that passes through maintenance without a corresponding journal entry in the fixed asset subledger creates a partial ghost asset. A component that no longer physically exists keeps depreciating on the books.
Kroll Advisory, which reports running more than 8,000 fixed asset engagements per year across 36 countries, finds that 10 to 30 percent of the average fixed asset register consists of ghost assets. A significant share were created exactly this way: not through neglect, but through a gap that requires explicit process and integration design to close, and that most implementations leave open.
The SAP component accounting gap is the disconnect between SAP's Plant Maintenance module and its Fixed Assets subledger that causes component-level changes to go unrecorded in the books, creating IAS 16 non-compliance and ghost asset exposure with every unlogged replacement.
SAP is the world's most widely deployed ERP for fixed asset accounting in manufacturing and regulated industries. Its Fixed Assets module manages capitalization, depreciation, and retirement of assets on the financial subledger. Its Plant Maintenance module manages work orders, component replacements, and maintenance history on the operational side.
These two modules are not integrated by default. SAP does support component accounting through asset subnumbers, parallel asset structures, and custom integration frameworks. However, this requires explicit implementation design that most organizations do not complete end-to-end. When a maintenance team replaces a significant component, that event is logged in Plant Maintenance as a work order. Without the integration in place, it is not written back to Fixed Assets as a component retirement and capitalization. The financial record does not change. The old component keeps depreciating.
The ledger ends up describing an asset that no longer exists in its recorded form. This represents a failure to comply with IAS 16 component accounting requirements. Auditors call it a material misstatement risk. Fixed asset managers often do not find out about it until a physical inspection reveals a discrepancy.
This gap is not a configuration mistake any individual company made. It reflects a combination of platform defaults and implementation realities that show up consistently across organizations.
Annual Audit vs. Continuous Component Tracking
Annual physical audits find component gaps after the fact, at a single point in time, with evidence quality limited to what can be reconstructed during the audit. ERP accuracy degrades between cycles and requires reconciliation effort before audit readiness is restored.
Continuous component tracking captures replacements at the time they happen, with time-stamped and inspection-verified evidence. IAS 16 compliance is proactive rather than reactive. The fixed asset subledger stays current and audit-ready without a reconciliation sprint.
When component replacements go unrecorded, the financial consequences are not theoretical.
"The problem is not that organizations lack asset data. It is that the data they have was never connected to a governed process that makes it trustworthy for financial reporting. A component replacement that stays in the maintenance log and never reaches the subledger is not an accounting entry. It is a future audit finding."
- Tim Harris, CEO, SoloTruth
The SAP component accounting gap affects any organization running SAP with significant physical assets and active maintenance programs.
Not all approaches to the SAP component accounting gap deliver IAS 16 compliance. When evaluating options, look for six capabilities:Continuous evidence capture rather than periodic snapshots. Annual or quarterly physical audits miss component replacements that happen between cycles.
Organizations that manage the SAP component accounting gap effectively share a set of practices that go beyond annual physical audits.
Reality: SAP supports component accounting as a configuration option, but does not enforce it operationally by default. The integration that would write maintenance outcomes back to the fixed asset subledger requires explicit design and activation. Most implementations do not complete this end-to-end.
Reality: Annual audits test samples, not populations. A componentization error that falls outside the sample goes undetected. PCAOB inspection data shows long-lived asset deficiencies doubled in 2024.
Reality: IAS 16 applies to any component that is significant in relation to the total cost of the item. There is no fixed percentage threshold. A series of individually smaller but collectively significant component replacements creates the same cumulative exposure.
Reality: RFID confirms asset presence and location. It does not identify component-level changes within an asset, trigger accounting entries, or route evidence through a compliance workflow. Asset tracking and asset relationship management are different capabilities.
The SAP component accounting gap is the disconnect between SAP's Plant Maintenance module and its Fixed Assets subledger. Component replacements logged in Plant Maintenance are not written back to Fixed Assets by default, creating IAS 16 non-compliance and phantom depreciation on replaced parts.
ABAVN handles asset retirement without revenue and ABAON handles retirement with revenue, but both operate at the whole-asset level. Partial component retirements require manual journal entries, typically posted via AB01. Without a governed workflow enforcing this step, these entries are rarely filed consistently.
IAS 16 paragraphs 43 through 47 require separate accounting for any component whose cost is significant relative to the total cost of the asset. There is no fixed percentage threshold in the standard. Significance is a matter of professional judgment applied to each asset class.
Yes. Every major ERP has the same design reality: physical tracking modules are not natively integrated with the fixed asset financial subledger out of the box. The specific transaction names differ, but the gap requires explicit integration design across SAP, Oracle Financials Cloud, and Microsoft Dynamics 365.
Ghost components in the fixed asset subledger become data quality blockers during migration. Horvath Partners found data quality failures to be the leading cause of budget overruns across 200 documented S/4HANA migrations.
Asset Relationship Management (ARM) is a category of software that verifies the physical existence, location, and condition of assets and reconciles that evidence directly with ERP financial records through a governed workflow. Where asset tracking produces location data, ARM produces audit-ready accounting entries.
The right frequency depends on maintenance cycle cadence and asset value. Organizations with active maintenance programs should capture component changes at the time they happen rather than reconstruct them during an annual audit.
The SAP component accounting gap is not a process problem that better training will solve. It is a design reality between two modules that were not built to stay in sync by default. Every maintenance cycle that runs without a corresponding fixed asset entry widens the gap.
Organizations that close this gap build a continuous evidence layer between physical operations and the financial subledger. That layer captures component changes at the time they happen, routes them through a governed accounting workflow with human review at the right decision points, and synchronizes the verified result directly to Fixed Assets without manual rekeying.
SoloTruth Asset Relationship Management (ARM) is the evidence-grade platform built for exactly this workflow. ARM connects physical inspection, AI-assisted document extraction, controller-approved accounting decisions, and direct ERP reconciliation into a single governed process. The output is not a dashboard or a report. It is a verified, audit-ready subledger entry with a complete evidence chain behind it.
Book a 30-minute strategy call at calendly.com/tim-harris-solotruth/30min to see how continuous verification changes what your fixed asset register is actually capable of.
Last Updated: May 2026