Your Airport Runs a Dozen Revenue Models. Can Finance See All of Them?Â
Airports carry more simultaneous revenue streams than almost any other infrastructure business, and the gaps between them are where money quietly goes missing.Â
Ask your CFO one question. If you picked any invoice going out the door today, an aeronautical charge, a concession settlement, a property indexation adjustment, how confident are they that it reflects the correct contract terms and the correct underlying event data, and that it would hold up if a regulator or an airline’s finance team challenged it?Â
For most airport leadership teams, the honest answer sits somewhere between “reasonably confident” and “we’d need a few days to check.”Â
Here is the uncomfortable part. That uncertainty is not the result of anything being broken. Your pricing engine works. Your contract system works. Your finance platform works. Each one does exactly what it was designed to do. The revenue that goes missing does so in the space between them, and it goes missing quietly, month after month, on invoices your finance team signs off without ever knowing a number was wrong. This is not a failure anyone gets caught for. It is a failure nobody sees, which is precisely what makes it a boardroom level risk rather than a finance department inefficiency.Â
It stays invisible right up until it isn’t. Until an airline disputes a landing charge calculation, an auditor asks how a lease indexation event reached the ledger, or a revenue leakage review surfaces a number that should have been caught months earlier.Â
We call this the Revenue Visibility Gap: the widening distance between what an airport’s operational systems capture and what its finance function can actually see, trust, and defend under audit.Â
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No other infrastructure business runs this many revenue models at onceÂ
A single hub airport can be running aeronautical charges priced on MTOW, ICAO code, and flight type, retail and concession contracts on Minimum Annual Guarantee structures with variable fee components, long term property leases with price indexation clauses, and parking, cargo, and IT services billing. All simultaneously, all governed by different teams, and historically, all sitting in different systems.Â
That is not a design flaw. It is the nature of the business. But it means the Revenue Visibility Gap shows up in airport finance functions in very specific ways.Â
Aeronautical and commercial data with no shared data model, so consolidated billing, accurate reporting, and real time financial visibility across revenue streams becomes structurally difficult rather than merely inconvenient.Â
MAG and variable fee retail contracts that legacy platforms cannot execute reliably, leaving finance to manually true up what the system could not calculate.Â
Property portfolios with indexation provisions that need systematic automation, because doing it by hand across a large lease book neither scales nor stays accurate.Â
Contract management disconnected from finance, where lease changes, renewals, and indexation events are negotiated by the commercial team and then manually reconciled before finance ever sees them.Â
No self-service for airlines, so every invoice question and every charge dispute becomes a phone call or an email thread rather than something an airline can resolve on its own.Â
Individually, none of these looks dangerous. That is the trap. No single one of them triggers an alarm, shows up as a failed process, or gets flagged in a monthly review. Collectively, they are how revenue quietly leaks, how audit trails break down, and how an airport’s finance team ends up spending its time reconciling instead of advising. The danger is not any one gap. It is that the whole set of them is designed to be invisible.
We saw this exact pattern at a major European hub airportÂ
One of Europe’s most commercially complex airport environments, spanning aeronautical charges, retail concessions, property, parking, cargo, and IT services, came to us carrying all five of these gaps at once. Aeronautical and commercial data lived in disconnected systems. SAP CLM was not connected to the financial system, so lease changes and indexation events required manual reconciliation before they reached finance. Retail contracts on MAG structures with variable components could not be executed reliably by the legacy platform. Airlines had no self service access to invoices, charge calculations, or dispute management.Â
In line with our standard practice we are not naming the airport here, but this is a live, delivered engagement rather than a hypothetical. If you would like to understand this use case in more detail, our team is happy to walk you through it.Â
None of that was a failure of ambition or investment. It was the accumulated cost of systems that were never unified around a single, governed data model, which is true of most airports still running this way today.Â
The fix is not a better tool. It is a shorter distance.Â
Faced with this, the instinct is usually to patch the weakest link. A new billing tool here, a reporting layer there. It rarely works, because the risk does not live inside any one system. It lives in the handoffs. A capable pricing engine bolted onto a disconnected contract platform still produces the same manual reconciliation problem it was meant to solve. You have not closed the gap. You have bought a more expensive edge to it.Â
Real financial control comes from treating quote to cash as one continuous, governed process, from the moment a flight lands, a lease is amended, or a concession sale happens, through to GL posting. Not as a collection of adjacent tools that happen to share a customer record.Â
That is the design principle behind the transformation we delivered at this airport: an integrated Quote to Cash platform on SAP S/4HANA Public Cloud, SAP Subscription Billing, and SAP CLM, where operational data flows automatically from source to settlement.Â
Aircraft movement events flow from the airport’s Queue and Charge Database straight into SAP Subscription Billing via SAP BTP, automating pricing across MTOW, ICAO code, flight type, origin, destination, and timing.Â
SAP CLM is integrated directly with SAP S/4HANA, so MAG structures, price indexation, and lease amendments flow automatically to finance without a manual bridge.Â
SAP Convergent Invoicing consolidates every charge type, aeronautical, retail, property, parking, cargo, and IT services, into a single accurate customer invoice.Â
SAP FICA manages subledger accounting, VAT, collections, and dispute management, with full traceability from the general ledger back down to the individual event.Â
A cloud native Q2C Customer Portal gives airlines direct, self service access to invoice management, charge calculation, and sales declaration submission.Â
Every number is auditable to its source automatically, rather than reconstructed after the fact when someone asks a question.Â
What closing the gap actually changes for airport leadershipÂ
The commercial upside is real. Fewer manual touchpoints, and a drastic fall in customer queries once self service is in place. But the more important outcome for leadership is control: a complete, auditable view across every revenue stream, with lease changes and indexation events flowing straight through to financial reporting instead of sitting in a queue waiting for someone to notice.Â
There is also a regulatory dimension airport boards are increasingly attentive to. This airport implemented e-invoicing to meet Belgian regulatory requirements, which also positions it ahead of the broader EU electronic invoicing mandate. Airports building a unified, auditable billing foundation now are the ones who will meet those mandates as a byproduct of good architecture, rather than as a last-minute scramble later.Â
The question worth asking in your next leadership meetingÂ
Every airport running multiple revenue models on disconnected systems is carrying some version of this risk today. The question is not whether the gap exists. Every complex airport has one. The question is whether anyone in the business can currently see it, or whether it is being signed off every month as though it were not there.Â
If your leadership team cannot say with confidence how an aeronautical event, a lease amendment, or a concession sale moves from the moment it happens to the moment it appears, reconciled and auditable, on an airline or tenant’s invoice, that is not a finance problem to schedule for next quarter. It is a Revenue Visibility Gap sitting on your balance sheet right now, and the fact that it looks quiet is not evidence that it is small.Â
Acuiti Labs is the largest dedicated SAP Quote to Cash team in the world, with a proprietary accelerator, AcuitiAirport, built specifically for airport billing environments. If you want to know where your own Revenue Visibility Gap is, talk to our team.Â
