🎯 Situación

Dos clientes, la misma pregunta: '¿Deberíamos movernos a Microsoft Fabric?' La empresa A pagaba $1,800/mes entre Azure Data Factory, Azure Synapse Analytics, Power BI Premium Per Capacity (P1) y Azure SQL. La empresa B pagaba $400/mes para Power BI Pro × 10 usuarios y Azure SQL.

👉 Microsoft Fabric no es una actualización universal. Es una consolidación — y la consolidación solo tiene sentido cuando tienes algo que consolidar.

⚠️ El reto

💵 Company A — the case FOR Fabric

  • Current spend: ADF $200 + Synapse $600 + Power BI Premium P1 $5,000 + Azure SQL $150 = $5,950/month
  • Fabric F64 replaces all four: $5,200/month — saves $750/month
  • Bonus: one unified workspace, one permission model, one billing line
  • Additional value: Lakehouse, Spark, Real-Time Analytics now available without extra licensing

🚫 Company B — the case AGAINST Fabric

  • Current spend: Power BI Pro × 10 = $140 + Azure SQL = $75 = $215/month
  • Fabric F2 entry SKU: $260/month — more expensive for fewer features
  • F64 (where it gets interesting): $5,200/month — 24× their current cost
  • Verdict: stay on Power BI Pro until data volumes or team size force the conversation

🔍 Análisis

What Fabric includes that justifies the price (at the right tier):

  • Lakehouse: store structured and unstructured data in Delta Lake format on OneLake — one copy of data for all workloads
  • Data Factory: pipeline orchestration with 200+ connectors, now native to Fabric — replace Azure Data Factory
  • Spark notebooks: run Python and Scala transformations at scale — replace Azure Synapse
  • Power BI: full Premium features including DirectLake (query OneLake directly without importing data)
  • Real-Time Intelligence: Eventstream and KQL databases for streaming analytics
  • Data Activator: trigger actions based on data conditions (replaces some Power Automate flows)
  • Microsoft Purview integration: unified governance across all data in OneLake

The break-even calculation: if you're paying more than $5,200/month across Azure data services + Power BI Premium, Fabric F64 is worth evaluating seriously. Below that, the economics don't favor consolidation.

✓️ Buena práctica

The three-question evaluation framework:

1. Are you paying for 3 or more Azure data services (ADF, Synapse, Azure ML, Databricks, Power BI Premium Capacity)?  If yes — Fabric is worth a cost comparison.
2. Are your data volumes hitting Power BI limits (datasets over 1GB in import mode, slow refreshes, capacity throttling)?  If yes — DirectLake in Fabric may solve this.
3. Do your data engineers, analysts, and data scientists need to work in the same platform?  If yes — Fabric's unified workspace eliminates context-switching and permission complexity.

If none of these apply: stay where you are. Fabric will still be there when you grow into it.

💡 Síntesis

Microsoft Fabric is worth the price — for the right company. That company has a fragmented Azure data stack, data volumes hitting Power BI limits, or a team that needs to work across data engineering and BI in one place. For everyone else, Power BI Pro + Azure SQL + a few Python scripts is still the most cost-effective modern data stack available.

👉 Microsoft Fabric isn't expensive for what it replaces.

It's expensive if you don't need what it replaces.