A buyer side guide to SAP indirect access pricing in 2026. How the digital access document model counts cost, what triggers a claim, and how to measure first.
SAP indirect access is priced through the digital access document model, which counts documents created in SAP rather than the users behind them, so measurement and the document block decide the cost.
This guide is for procurement and SAP architecture leaders facing an indirect access question in 2026. Pair it with the indirect access pillar and the SAP Practice page so the measurement and the deal align.
Indirect access is use of SAP through something other than a licensed SAP user. A connected web shop, a bot, or a third party application touching SAP data all count. SAP prices most of it through documents.
After years of disputes over connected users, SAP moved to digital access in 2018. The model counts documents created in SAP, which is meant to be measurable rather than argued.
SAP counts nine document types, charged at initial creation. Reads and later updates are not charged again, so the volume of new documents is what sets the bill.
You buy a block of documents at a tiered price, and the count sets the cost. SAP documents the digital access model and the nine document types in its own licensing material, which is the reference to confirm scope.
How the digital access document model is structured
| Element | How it works | Buyer side note |
|---|---|---|
| Counted documents | Nine types, charged at creation | Map which your estate creates |
| Chargeable event | Initial creation only | Reads and updates are free |
| Pricing | Tiered blocks of documents | Larger blocks lower unit price |
| Measurement | SAP tooling estimates volume | Run it yourself first |
| Conversion | Existing users can elect the model | Model both before choosing |
It depends on your shape. High volume automated estates can pay more under documents, while estates with many light touch connected users can pay less. Measure before assuming a direction.
Control comes from measurement and timing. Count first, challenge documents created by internal automation, and negotiate the block size and price inside the wider SAP deal.
Indirect access is use of SAP data or processes through a non SAP application or device rather than through a licensed SAP user. Since 2018 SAP prices most of it through the digital access document model, which counts documents created in SAP rather than the users behind them.
It is priced on the digital access document model, which counts nine document types created in SAP, such as sales, purchase, and invoice documents. You buy a block of documents, and the count rather than the connected user base sets the bill.
SAP counts nine document types, including sales documents, invoice documents, purchase documents, service and maintenance documents, and material documents among others. Initial creation is the chargeable event, so reads and updates are not charged again.
Sometimes. For high volume automated estates the document model can cost more, while for estates with many light touch connected users it can cost less. You have to measure your own document creation before assuming either direction.
Measure document creation with SAP tooling, challenge documents created by internal automation, and negotiate the document block size and price at the same time as your wider SAP deal rather than as a separate claim.
Yes. SAP can measure document creation and raise a claim for unlicensed indirect use. The defense is your own measurement, run before SAP runs theirs, so you control the number that frames the conversation.
SAP RISE pricing benchmarks, the CVR framework, indirect access posture, and the buyer side moves across the full SAP estate.
Used across more than five hundred enterprise engagements. Independent. Buyer side. Built for procurement leaders running the next renewal cycle.
The estate that measures its own document creation before SAP does is the one that controls the indirect access number, rather than reacting to a claim.
500+ enterprise clients. 11 vendor practices. Industry recognized. One conversation can change what you pay for the next three years.
One short note on SAP licensing, indirect and digital access, RISE, and the buyer side moves we are running in client engagements.