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Den vollständigen Leitfaden lesenThe short answer: Fabric and Power BI are not competitors, and you do not choose between them. Microsoft Fabric is the umbrella data platform — lakehouse, warehouse, pipelines, real-time intelligence, data science, and BI in one SaaS product — and Power BI is the business-intelligence experience inside it. Every Power BI deployment today technically lives in Fabric. The real question buyers are asking is narrower and more practical: do we just need Power BI Pro licenses for reporting, or do we need paid Fabric capacity (F-SKUs) — and the answer for most small and mid-market companies is that Pro licensing alone remains enough, while capacity becomes worthwhile when you hit specific, identifiable triggers.
This guide untangles the branding, explains what changed with the retirement of Premium P-SKUs, and gives you concrete decision rules and cost scenarios so you stop overbuying.
Key Takeaways
- Power BI is the BI workload inside Microsoft Fabric — Fabric replaced "Power BI Premium" as the capacity platform; P-SKUs are retired in favor of Fabric F-SKUs
- You still buy Power BI Pro ($14/user/month) and PPU ($24/user/month) per user; Fabric capacity (F2–F2048) is an additional, optional compute purchase
- Most organizations under ~350 report consumers need only Pro licenses and zero Fabric capacity
- The real Fabric triggers: free-viewer distribution at F64+, Copilot AI features (F64+), models beyond Pro's size limits, or wanting the lakehouse/pipeline/warehouse workloads themselves
- F-SKUs start small — an F2 at roughly $263/month pay-as-you-go (~$156 reserved) buys capacity features without the old P1-sized commitment
- OneLake (Fabric's built-in data lake) plus shortcuts and mirroring can replace a separate warehouse stack for many mid-market data estates
- The most common 2026 buying mistake we see: purchasing F64 "for Copilot" before the data model and governance fundamentals exist to make any of it useful
Untangling the Branding: How Fabric and Power BI Relate
Microsoft's analytics branding has been through several eras, and most confusion traces to that history rather than to the technology:
| Era | What You Bought | What It Was |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-2023 | Power BI Pro / Premium (P-SKUs) | BI tool + dedicated BI capacity |
| 2023–2024 | Power BI inside new Fabric preview/GA | BI tool + emerging unified data platform |
| 2025–2026 | Power BI Pro/PPU + Fabric F-SKUs | BI experience inside the Fabric platform; P-SKUs retired |
Today the stack is: OneLake (a built-in, tenant-wide data lake) underneath everything; workloads on top of it — Data Factory (pipelines), Data Engineering (Spark lakehouse), Data Warehouse (T-SQL), Real-Time Intelligence (streaming), Data Science (notebooks/ML), and Power BI (semantic models and reports); all governed in one SaaS tenant with shared security, capacity, and admin. Power BI Desktop, the report-building workflow, DAX, and your existing reports are unchanged — they simply run on this platform now.
So "Fabric vs Power BI" really decomposes into two separate purchasing questions:
- Per-user licensing — who authors and consumes reports? (Pro/PPU, unchanged.)
- Capacity — do we need dedicated compute for scale, AI features, or the non-BI workloads? (F-SKUs, optional.)
What the P-SKU to F-SKU Change Means for You
If you previously ran or evaluated Power BI Premium, the mapping is straightforward: P1 capacity corresponds to F64, P2 to F128, and so on. Three practical differences matter:
Lower entry point. P-SKUs started at P1 (roughly $5,000/month) — an enterprise-only cliff. F-SKUs start at F2 (~$263/month pay-as-you-go, ~$156 reserved), so capacity features like larger models and unlimited-ish refresh schedules are now accessible to mid-market teams in small increments: F2, F4, F8, F16, F32...
One pool, many workloads. A Fabric capacity is shared compute across all workloads. Your pipelines, lakehouse jobs, warehouse queries, and report renders all draw from the same capacity units, with smoothing and throttling rules. That is operationally elegant and budgetarily dangerous — a runaway Spark notebook can degrade dashboard performance — so capacity monitoring and surge protection settings become part of basic hygiene.
The F64 threshold. Two of the most-wanted features gate at F64 (~$8,410/month pay-as-you-go, ~$5,003 reserved): viewers with free licenses (below F64, every report consumer still needs Pro) and Copilot AI features. This single threshold drives most real-world Fabric buying decisions.
What Do You Actually Need? Decision Rules
You need only Power BI Pro (no Fabric capacity) when: you have up to a few hundred users, models under 1 GB compressed, eight scheduled refreshes a day is enough, and your data pipeline needs are met by Power Query and a gateway. This describes most companies under 500 employees, full stop. Annual cost for, say, 50 users: about $8,400.
Consider PPU ($24/user/month) when: a small analyst team needs big models (up to 100 GB), 48 refreshes/day, or deployment pipelines — without buying shared capacity. PPU is the most under-recommended license in the stack; a 10-analyst team gets premium-grade features for $2,880/year.
Buy a small F-SKU (F2–F32) when: you want Fabric's data workloads themselves — replacing aging SSIS/ETL with Data Factory, landing data in a lakehouse instead of standing up a separate warehouse, or mirroring operational databases into OneLake for analytics without building pipelines at all. For ERP-connected analytics this is increasingly the clean architecture: mirror or pipeline your ERP data into OneLake, model once, serve everywhere.
Buy F64+ when: you can cross any one of these lines with confidence — (a) roughly 350–500+ report consumers, where free-viewer distribution beats buying everyone Pro; (b) Copilot is genuinely part of your analytics strategy and your data estate is ready for it; (c) sustained workloads that small SKUs throttle.
| Scenario | Right Answer | Approx. Annual Cost (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| 60-person company, 40 report users | 40 Pro seats | ~$6,700 |
| 10 analysts needing 5 GB models + pipelines | 10 PPU seats | ~$2,900 |
| Mid-market replacing ETL + warehouse stack | F8 reserved + Pro seats | ~$7,500 capacity + seats |
| 800-viewer enterprise rollout | F64 reserved + author Pro seats | ~$60,000 + seats |
| "We want Copilot" with 50 users | F64 required — challenge the requirement first | ~$60,000+ |
That last row is deliberate. The most common overbuy we encounter in 2026 is an F64 purchased for AI features that stall because the underlying semantic models were never built properly — Copilot amplifies the quality of your data model; it does not substitute for one.
Migration and Adoption Notes
- Existing Power BI estates need no migration — reports, workspaces, and gateways continue working. "Adopting Fabric" for a Pro-only shop is a licensing non-event until you assign workspaces to a capacity.
- Former Premium (P-SKU) customers have been transitioned to F-SKUs at renewal; revisit sizing during that conversion rather than lifting-and-shifting the old SKU size, because workload smoothing changes the math.
- Start non-BI workloads small: land one pipeline and one lakehouse on an F2/F4 trial, validate capacity consumption in the metrics app, then reserve. Fabric's pay-as-you-go pricing makes pilots cheap; reservations (~40% saving) are for proven workloads.
- Governance scales differently: OneLake makes data sharing tenant-wide and easy — which means workspace structure, domains, and certification discipline matter from day one, before sprawl, not after.
- Moving off a legacy BI or warehouse stack (SSRS estates, aging SSIS packages, an end-of-life warehouse appliance, or a competing BI tool) is the scenario where Fabric adoption becomes a real project rather than a licensing decision. The sequencing that works: land the data layer first (pipelines or mirroring into OneLake), rebuild semantic models on the new foundation second, and migrate reports last — reports are the cheapest layer to recreate and the worst place to start. We run these as phased fixed-fee engagements through our migration service, and the parallel-run period before cutover is non-negotiable regardless of who does the work.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Power BI being replaced by Microsoft Fabric?
No. Power BI is the business-intelligence component of Fabric and remains fully supported, actively developed, and centrally branded. What was replaced is the capacity packaging: "Power BI Premium" P-SKUs retired in favor of Fabric F-SKUs. Your Power BI Desktop workflow, DAX, semantic models, and reports carry forward unchanged.
Do I have to pay for Fabric to keep using Power BI?
No. Power BI Pro ($14/user/month) and Premium Per User ($24/user/month) licensing works exactly as before, with no capacity purchase required. Fabric capacity is an optional addition for free-viewer distribution at scale, Copilot, very large models, or the data-platform workloads (pipelines, lakehouse, warehouse, real-time intelligence).
What is the cheapest way to get Fabric capacity features?
An F2 SKU at roughly $263/month pay-as-you-go, or about $156/month on a one-year reservation. You can also pause pay-as-you-go capacity when idle, which makes evaluation projects very cheap. Note the small-SKU constraints — memory limits cap semantic model sizes (around 3 GB on F2), and viewers still need Pro licenses on anything below F64.
At what point does F64 become cheaper than buying Pro licenses for everyone?
The crossover sits around 350–500 report consumers. F64 reserved costs about $60,000/year and lets unlimited Free-license users view content; 500 Pro seats cost about $84,000/year. Below ~350 consumers, Pro seats win; above ~500, capacity wins clearly; in between, weigh the F64 extras (Copilot, larger models, Fabric workloads) as the tiebreaker. Authors always need Pro regardless.
Is OneLake a real replacement for our data warehouse?
For many mid-market estates, yes — Fabric's lakehouse and warehouse workloads on OneLake can replace a separate Synapse/Snowflake/SQL-warehouse stack, especially with mirroring (continuous replication of operational databases into OneLake) removing pipeline work for supported sources. Large enterprises with mature Snowflake/Databricks investments typically integrate via shortcuts rather than replace. Treat it as a serious option in any 2026 platform evaluation, not a default in either direction.
Do we need Fabric to connect Power BI to our ERP?
No — gateway-based connections, connectors, and import-mode refresh cover ERP reporting on plain Pro licensing, which is how most Odoo, Dynamics, NetSuite, and SAP reporting estates run. Fabric becomes interesting for ERP analytics when you want the data layer modernized too: mirroring or pipelines landing ERP data in OneLake, one governed model serving many downstream uses. That is an architecture decision, not a licensing prerequisite.
Get an Architecture Recommendation, Not a SKU Upsell
ECOSIRE designs Microsoft analytics estates that match what you actually need — from Pro-only reporting deployments to full Fabric data platforms with lakehouse pipelines feeding governed semantic models. We are specialists in ERP-connected analytics (Odoo, SAP, Dynamics 365, NetSuite), and our first deliverable in every engagement is a licensing-and-architecture map with three-year costs, so you never buy F64 to solve a data modeling problem.
Start with our Power BI implementation service or see how we operationalize Copilot-era features in our AI analytics service — or contact us for a free Fabric-readiness assessment of your current Power BI estate.
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ECOSIRE TeamTechnical Writing
The ECOSIRE technical writing team covers Odoo ERP, Shopify eCommerce, AI agents, Power BI analytics, GoHighLevel automation, and enterprise software best practices. Our guides help businesses make informed technology decisions.
ECOSIRE
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