Implementing ASU 2024-03 is not just a compliance task but a complex, multiyear transition.
Implementing ASU 2024-03 is not just a compliance task but a complex, multiyear transition.
A detailed readiness assessment and phased implementation are key to develop a disclosure model.
Early planning strengthens cost transparency, internal controls and investor confidence.
Implementing ASU 2024-03, Disaggregation of Income Statement Expenses (DISE), is not a single-point compliance exercise. It is a multiyear journey that requires coordinated action across finance, systems, controls and operations.
While ASU 2024-03 introduces new disclosure requirements, the underlying challenge is operational. Many public companies do not currently capture expense data at the level of granularity required, nor do they have repeatable processes, controls or ownership models in place to support consistent disclosure. As a result, the level of effort required is frequently underestimated.
Companies that wait too long risk compressed timelines, manual workarounds and increased audit scrutiny. Those that plan early can turn DISE into a controlled, auditable and strategically useful financial reporting capability.
ASU 2024-03 requires public business entities to disclose DISE in a standardized tabular format within the footnotes in annual and interim financial statements.
The disclosure applies to income statement line items that qualify as relevant expense captions, meaning captions that include one or more of the required expense categories:
Purchases of inventory
Employee compensation
Depreciation
Intangible asset amortization
Depletion and amortization for oil and gas mining entities
Annual reporting for fiscal years beginning after Dec. 15, 2026
Interim reporting for periods beginning after Dec. 15, 2027
Importantly, DISE readiness is not solely a finance responsibility. Successful adoption requires coordination across finance, information technology, operations, financial planning and analysis, and internal audit to ensure data integrity, control design and audit readiness.
Many organizations are surprised to learn how much effort DISE requires once systems, estimation methodologies and controls are considered.
A structured readiness assessment can help identify:
This early clarity is critical to avoid last-minute remediation and audit challenges.
The timeline below reflects how leading organizations are approaching ASU 2024-03 adoption in a structured, defensible way.
Target timing: Early 2026
Intended outcome: A shared understanding of what DISE requires and why early action matters
Target timing: Mid-2026
Intended outcome: A clear view of existing capabilities and initial exposure areas
Target timing: Late 2026
Intended outcome: An actionable plan aligned to both reporting deadlines and broader transformation initiatives
Target timing: Late 2026 through mid-2027
Intended outcome: Audit-ready processes supported by repeatable systems and documented controls
Target timing: 2027 and beyond
Intended outcome: A sustainable DISE operating model embedded into normal reporting cycles
DISE requires more than new disclosures. It requires new discipline around how expense data is captured, governed and explained.
Organizations that plan early benefit from:
Those that delay their journey often face compressed timelines, elevated risk and missed opportunities to modernize finance operations.
RSM supports public companies throughout the DISE journey, from early readiness through sustained compliance. Our approach spans:
We help organizations deliver accurate, audit-ready DISE disclosures while building a foundation that improves forecasting, cost transparency and investor confidence.