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Pricing sourced from Microsoft Fabric · Last verified March 2026
Microsoft Fabric is a unified SaaS analytics platform that consolidates the capabilities previously split across Azure Synapse Analytics, Azure Data Factory, Power BI, and other Microsoft analytics services into one product. Unlike Synapse, which required infrastructure provisioning and separate tools for each workload, Fabric runs as a fully managed SaaS with a shared compute capacity model. Power BI is now one of seven workloads inside Fabric rather than a standalone product. The unification means a single workspace, single permissions model, and a single underlying data lake (OneLake) for all analytics work.
Microsoft Fabric is priced at $0.18 per Capacity Unit (CU) per hour on pay-as-you-go, sold as F SKUs ranging from F2 (2 CUs, ~$0.36/hour or ~$263/month running continuously) up to F2048 (2048 CUs, ~$368.64/hour). Reserved 1-year capacity is priced at approximately $0.11 per CU-hour (~40% discount), putting F64 at roughly $4,916/month instead of ~$8,294/month on pay-as-you-go. Power BI Pro licenses ($14/user/month) and Premium Per User ($24/user/month) are still required for content consumption depending on capacity size, though F64 and above include free Power BI viewing for users in the same tenant. A 60-day free trial with F64 equivalent capacity is offered. Storage in OneLake is billed separately at Azure Data Lake Storage rates (~$0.023/GB/month for hot tier).
OneLake is the unified, multi-cloud data lake that underpins Microsoft Fabric — Microsoft positions it as the 'OneDrive for data.' Every Fabric tenant gets a single OneLake automatically, and all workloads (Warehouse, Lakehouse, KQL, Power BI) store data there in the open Delta Parquet format. This means no data duplication between engines, shortcuts let you reference data from ADLS Gen2, S3, or GCS without copying, and the same dataset can be queried by Spark, T-SQL, or DAX. It eliminates the traditional pain of moving data between specialized analytics services.
Yes — Fabric IQ is the AI layer embedded across every Fabric workload, with Copilot available in Power BI, Data Factory, Data Engineering, Data Warehouse, Data Science, and Real-Time Intelligence. Users can generate DAX measures, T-SQL queries, PySpark notebooks, and entire Power BI reports from natural language prompts. Copilot also explains existing code, summarizes data, and helps build pipelines. Copilot in Fabric requires F64 or higher capacity in most regions.
Fabric is best suited for mid-market and enterprise organizations that have already standardized on Microsoft 365, Azure, or Power BI and want to consolidate fragmented analytics tooling into a single platform. Cross-functional data teams — engineers, analysts, scientists, and BI developers — benefit most because they can collaborate in one workspace without exporting data between tools. It's less suitable for teams committed to AWS or GCP-native stacks, or for very small teams whose workloads don't justify the minimum capacity costs. Compared to alternatives like Databricks or Snowflake in our directory, Fabric wins on Microsoft-stack integration and unified BI; it loses on multi-cloud neutrality and ML maturity.
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