LOIS Leasing Blog

What is a managed service for lease accounting? (A plain-English guide)

Written by Stefan Iggo | Apr 01, 2026

A lease accounting managed service is an outsourced arrangement where a specialist team handles your entire lease compliance process each month. This includes data validation, calculations, journal preparation, and audit-ready reporting, delivered as a regular, controlled output rather than requiring your internal team to run the process. Whether your organisation reports under IFRS 16, AASB 16, or FRS 102, the model is the same: structured monthly outputs, expert-validated, ready to post.

For many finance teams across Australia, New Zealand, and the UK, it's the answer to a question that surfaces around audit time: "Should we be doing this ourselves?"

Managed service vs. lease accounting software

The distinction matters, and it's often misunderstood. Lease accounting software gives you the tools. A managed service gives you the outputs.

With a standalone software platform, your team is responsible for loading lease data accurately, running the calculations correctly, preparing the journals, and producing the reporting packs. The software automates the maths, but your people still own the process.

A managed service removes that burden. Your team provides the inputs. The managed service team validates them, runs the calculations, prepares the journals, and delivers reconciled outputs ready to post. You retain oversight and sign-off; you don't carry the processing weight.

Both have a role depending on your team's capacity, expertise, and portfolio complexity. Some organisations start with a managed service and transition to self-service as their internal capability grows. Others stay on managed service indefinitely because the risk reduction and time savings justify the cost. If you're considering the self-serve path, the LOIS lease accounting module is worth exploring.

What does a lease accounting managed service actually include?

The scope varies between providers, but a comprehensive managed service for IFRS 16/AASB 16/FRS 102 compliance should include all of the following every month:

  • Data validation by qualified accountants. Every lease record is reviewed before calculations run. New leases, modifications, terminations, and CPI adjustments are checked for accuracy and completeness, not just loaded and assumed correct.
  • Expert review of calculations. Standards like IFRS 16, AASB 16, and FRS 102 involve judgements: discount rates, lease term assessments, modification accounting. A managed service team applies that judgement, not just automated rules.
  • Journals prepared and delivered, ready for posting. Your finance team should receive fully prepared journal entries that can be posted directly to your general ledger, with no further calculation required.
  • Monthly audit-ready reporting packs. Disclosures, amortisation schedules, ROU asset movements, and lease liability reconciliations, packaged and ready for your finance team and auditors.
  • Proactive identification of discrepancies and portfolio risks. A good managed service team doesn't just process what you send. They flag anomalies, unusual movements, and potential errors before they become audit findings.
  • A dedicated expert contact. Not a general support queue. One named specialist who knows your portfolio, your GL structure, and your reporting deadlines.

If a provider can't describe all six of these elements clearly, ask why not.

Who is a managed service for?

A managed service isn't for everyone. It makes the most sense in specific situations:

Finance teams without deep lease accounting expertise in-house. IFRS 16, AASB 16, and FRS 102 are specialist standards. Many capable finance teams, particularly those in industries where leasing is operationally significant but not the core focus, don't have a dedicated lease accounting expert. A managed service provides that expertise without the hiring cost.

Organisations where manual management is no longer viable. Software alone may be sufficient at lower volumes, but when the monthly flow of new leases, modifications, terminations, and CPI reviews creates real complexity, having an expert team validate and process the data each month pays for itself in error prevention alone.

Companies facing an upcoming audit. If your auditors have raised concerns about your IFRS 16 workings, or if you're facing your first significant external audit under the standard, a managed service provides confidence that your outputs are defensible. It also means your auditors are working from a managed, reconciled pack, not chasing you for supporting schedules. Our guide on preparing for a lease accounting audit covers what auditors actually look for.

Businesses that have outgrown point-in-time advisory. Engaging a large accounting firm for an annual IFRS 16 health check has value. But it's retrospective. A managed service runs monthly, which means issues are caught and corrected before they compound, not discovered 12 months later during a review.

UK organisations reporting under FRS 102. The FRS 102 update (effective January 2026) introduces a lease accounting model closely aligned with IFRS 16, bringing right-of-use asset recognition to UK GAAP reporters for the first time. For smaller UK businesses encountering this complexity without prior IFRS 16 experience, a managed service is particularly well-suited: it provides immediate expert capacity without building an in-house capability that may not exist yet.

The difference between a firm and a platform

When organisations search for managed lease accounting services, they typically encounter two categories of provider: large advisory firms, and purpose-built software platforms.

Advisory firms can offer lease accounting managed services, often as an extension of their audit or accounting advisory practices. Their strength is deep accounting expertise. The limitations are cost (advisory billing rates apply), generic tooling (they may be running your numbers in a spreadsheet or a system that isn't purpose-built for lease accounting), and limited operational continuity (staff rotate, partners move).

Purpose-built platforms approach managed service differently. The calculations run in a controlled, auditable system. The data flows from a single source of truth. The outputs are generated systematically, not manually assembled. The team operating the service is working inside the same platform your data lives in, not bridging between a PDF lease schedule and a separate accounting tool.

Neither approach is inherently superior for every organisation. But for companies with material lease portfolios that require monthly compliance outputs, a platform-based managed service typically offers better consistency, lower cost, and greater audit traceability than advisory-led alternatives.

What makes LOIS's managed service different

LOIS combines a purpose-built lease accounting and management platform with CA-qualified lease accounting specialists who run the process inside that platform every month. The expert validation is built into the workflow, not bolted on as an afterthought.

Several things set the LOIS Managed Service apart from both advisory firm offerings and software-only alternatives:

  • Expert validation embedded in the platform. The LOIS team reviews every data input within the system, not in a separate spreadsheet. Discrepancies are flagged and resolved before calculations run, maintaining a clean, auditable record throughout.
  • CA-qualified accountants who understand the standards in practice. The team isn't just trained on the software. They are leasing specialists who understand the practical application of IFRS 16, AASB 16, and FRS 102: discount rate selection, modification triggers, short-term and low-value lease exemptions. The LOIS team's accounting credentials are foundational to the service, not incidental.
  • A dedicated LOIS expert per client. Every client has a named expert who knows their portfolio structure, their general ledger, and their reporting deadlines. When something changes (a new property lease, a fleet modification, a CPI adjustment), your expert handles it in context, not from scratch.
  • Monthly reconciled outputs, not periodic reports. Journals are prepared and delivered each month. Reporting packs are reconciled and audit-ready. The process is continuous, not annual.

The result is a service that functions as an extension of your finance team, with the expertise and infrastructure that most internal teams can't justify building themselves.

How it works month to month

The LOIS Managed Service follows a consistent, controlled monthly cycle:

  1. Data into LOIS. Your team uploads any updates for the month: new leases, modifications, terminations, payment changes. These are loaded into the LOIS platform using standardised templates or specialised UX dependent on requirements.
  2. Expert validation. Your dedicated LOIS expert reviews all inputs, cross-checks against existing data, identifies discrepancies, and confirms the data is accurate before anything is calculated.
  3. Calculations run. IFRS 16/AASB 16/FRS 102 calculations (amortisation schedules, interest calculations, ROU asset movements, lease liability reconciliations) are generated within the platform.
  4. Journals prepared. Your LOIS expert prepares the accounting journals, mapped to your GL structure and ready to post directly to your ERP or accounting system.
  5. Reporting pack delivered. A complete, audit-ready reporting pack is compiled: disclosures, schedules, and supporting data, formatted for both your finance team and external auditors.
  6. Client review and posting. Your team reviews the outputs, approves, and posts the journals. Oversight stays with you; the processing doesn't have to.

The cycle repeats each month with the same expert, the same platform, and the same controlled process, building an audit trail that accumulates over time into a complete, defensible record of every modification, calculation, and decision.

If you're managing a complex or growing lease portfolio and want to understand whether a managed service is the right fit, learn more about the LOIS platform or read more about how spreadsheets fall short for IFRS 16 compliance.

Frequently asked questions

Is a lease accounting managed service worth it?

For organisations with material lease portfolios, significant monthly complexity, or limited in-house expertise in IFRS 16, AASB 16, or FRS 102, a managed service typically delivers clear value. The cost of errors in lease accounting reporting (audit adjustments, restatements, additional audit fees) almost always exceeds the cost of a well-run managed service. For smaller, simpler portfolios, a self-service software platform may be sufficient.

How is a managed service different from hiring a consultant?

A consultant is typically engaged for a defined project: an IFRS 16 implementation, a one-off restatement, or an annual review. A managed service is an ongoing operational arrangement. Your managed service team runs the process every month, builds institutional knowledge of your portfolio, and provides continuity that a project-based consultant engagement cannot.

What is the difference between outsourced lease accounting and a managed service?

Outsourced lease accounting can refer to any arrangement where an external party handles some or all of your lease accounting work. A managed service implies a structured, recurring delivery model: consistent monthly outputs, defined scope, a dedicated team, and a controlled process. All managed services are a form of outsourced lease accounting; not all outsourced lease accounting arrangements are managed services.

How much does a lease accounting managed service cost?

Pricing varies based on portfolio size, complexity, and scope of service. Advisory firm managed services are typically priced on advisory billing rates, which can be significant for ongoing monthly engagements. Platform-based managed services like LOIS tend to be priced on a monthly basis tied to portfolio size, making the cost predictable and scalable.

Does LOIS's managed service cover FRS 102?

Yes. The updated FRS 102 standard (effective January 2026) introduces a lease accounting model closely aligned with IFRS 16. LOIS supports FRS 102 reporting as part of its managed service offering, making it particularly well-suited for UK businesses navigating the transition for the first time. The same expert-led, monthly delivery model applies regardless of which standard you report under.

Talk to our team about LOIS Managed Service