Why Data Is Not on
the Balance Sheet
The structural reasons data remains invisible in financial reporting, and how that may change
If data is as valuable as widely claimed, a straightforward question follows: why does it not appear on the balance sheet? The answer is not that data lacks value — it is that internally generated data rarely satisfies the criteria required for asset recognition. This is not an oversight. It is the result of how accounting standards, legal systems, and governance structures have evolved.
For most organisations, the answer is not that data lacks value. It is that internally generated data, under current accounting and legal frameworks, will rarely satisfy the criteria required to be recognised as an asset. This is an important distinction: data acquired through a business combination or external purchase can appear on the balance sheet at fair value. The challenge is specific to data that organisations have built themselves — which describes the majority of the most commercially valuable datasets in existence.
This is not an oversight. It is the result of how accounting standards, legal systems and governance structures have evolved, and the extent to which data does not fit neatly within them.
The Accounting Position:
Recognition Requires Structure
Under international accounting standards, particularly IAS 38, internally generated intangible assets must satisfy a set of well-established criteria before they can be recognised. An asset must be identifiable, capable of being controlled, and measurable on a reliable basis. These requirements are not arbitrary — they reflect the need for consistency, auditability and comparability across financial reporting.
It is worth noting that the position under US Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) is even more restrictive. Under US GAAP, internally developed intangible assets, including data, are generally required to be expensed as incurred, with very limited exceptions. IFRS, through IAS 38, provides marginally more flexibility in principle, but in practice the barriers to recognition of internally generated data are equally prohibitive under both frameworks.
Investment in data is typically expensed through the profit and loss account, while the underlying datasets remain unrecognised. The balance sheet records the cost of building data capability, but not the asset that may have been created.
Three Barriers to Recognition
In practice, most organisational data struggles to meet the recognition thresholds across three distinct dimensions. The difficulty is not that data lacks economic significance — it is that it lacks the structure required to satisfy these tests in a defensible way.
The Result:
A Structural Disconnect
Taken together, these barriers create a persistent disconnect within financial reporting. Data drives enterprise value, underpins revenue generation and informs strategy — yet none of this is directly reflected in the formal financial position of the company.
The balance sheet can therefore appear structurally incomplete. In some cases, this leads to a clear paradox: liabilities associated with data-driven businesses are recognised, while the data itself is not.
"Data is economically significant, but institutionally incomplete. The absence from the balance sheet is not evidence of lacking value — it is evidence of lacking structure."
Miles Benham & Carly StrattonThis has practical implications. It affects valuation multiples, capital efficiency, investor perception and access to financing. The issue is not abstract — it shapes how organisations are understood and valued in the market.
Beyond Accounting:
The Absence of Infrastructure
It is tempting to frame this as a limitation of accounting standards. That would be an incomplete diagnosis. Accounting is, in many respects, reflecting a deeper issue: data lacks the legal and institutional infrastructure required to behave like an asset.
Other asset classes benefit from established systems of identification, governance and verification:
- Land has registries that record ownership and provenance with legal force
- Securities have clearing and custody systems that establish clear entitlements
- Intellectual property has formalised rights frameworks with enforceable mechanisms
Data does not yet benefit from universally adopted equivalent structures. There is no universally accepted mechanism for defining datasets, recording ownership and provenance, or enforcing consistent governance standards. Without these foundations, it is difficult to establish ownership, demonstrate control, or evidence value in a way that satisfies external scrutiny. Accounting simply exposes this structural gap.
Towards Recognition:
A More Structured Approach
If data is to appear on the balance sheet in a meaningful way, the underlying issue must be addressed at its source. Data must be capable of being clearly defined, legally structured and governed in a consistent and auditable manner. Only then can it begin to satisfy the conditions required for recognition.
One example of an emerging framework is the Isle of Man Data Asset Foundation — a structure established to introduce legal structure, governance and registry-based infrastructure to data assets. Within such a framework, datasets can be formally defined, governed through enforceable mechanisms, and recorded within a structured register that captures provenance, rights and attributes. This does not alter accounting standards directly. Instead, it creates the conditions in which data may begin to satisfy them.
In April 2024, the International Accounting Standards Board formally launched a comprehensive review of IAS 38 — the first such review in two decades. In May 2025, all fourteen IASB board members agreed to begin substantive work on the project, with the stated aim of making IAS 38 more suitable for newer types of intangible assets and new ways of using them — a category likely to include certain forms of data-related intangible assets. While comprehensive reform is likely still some years away, the direction of travel is now formally established at the highest level of international accounting standard-setting.
What This Means
for Organisations
For now, most organisations will continue to operate within existing frameworks. However, the direction of travel is becoming increasingly clear. Organisations that begin to:
- Map and define their data assets with precision
- Establish robust and auditable governance structures
- Develop defensible valuation methodologies aligned to emerging standards
…are likely to be better positioned as the landscape evolves. This is not because accounting rules will necessarily change in the near term. It is because the underlying data will have been structured in a way that aligns with them.
Conclusion:
Not an Absence of Value, but of Structure
The absence of data from the balance sheet is often interpreted as evidence that it lacks value. In reality, the issue is one of structure. Data is economically significant, but institutionally incomplete.
As frameworks emerge that allow it to be defined, governed and measured with greater precision, the conditions for recognition may begin to develop. Until then, one of the most important resources in the modern economy will remain present in practice, but largely invisible in form.
"The balance sheet records the cost of building data capability, but not the asset that may have been created. That is the structural paradox at the heart of the modern digital economy."
Miles Benham & Carly StrattonFrequently Asked Questions
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