Bottom line: SAP security must be structured as a continuous process, not as a completed project with one-time measures.
SAP systems require permanent security management, not point-in-time projects. The 2026 SAP Security Checklist from Onapsis demonstrates how consistent foundational controls and ongoing checks minimize risk.
Many organizations treat SAP security as a time-limited initiative — risking vulnerabilities once the project concludes. This approach falls short: protecting SAP environments sustainably requires anchoring security as an ongoing task.
This is realized through two pillars: first, consistent implementation of foundational controls (such as access control, patch management, audit logging), and second, regular security reviews to identify emerging threats and validate existing configurations. Gaps in these areas rank among the most common attack vectors in SAP systems.
The 2026 SAP Security Checklist from Onapsis provides CISOs with a structured overview of these standards. It supports prioritization of measures and clarifies which control mechanisms effectively reduce security risk.
Source: itwelt.at · Published 26 June 2026
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