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Business Central 2026 Wave 1 Is Here — And It Feels Like the Start of a New ERP Era

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Business Central 2026 Wave 1 Is Here — And It Feels Like the Start of a New ERP Era

Every release wave matters. This one feels different.

Microsoft’s plan for Dynamics 365 Business Central 2026 release wave 1 covers features rolling out from April 2026 through September 2026, with general availability beginning April 1, 2026. And while some items are still in preview or planned status and may change, the direction is already unmistakable: Business Central is moving from a solid, cloud-first ERP into something far more ambitious—an AI-driven, action-oriented business platform. ([Microsoft Learn][1])

What makes this wave so exciting is not just the number of features. It is the shape of the investment. Microsoft is pushing forward on four fronts at once: AI agents inside everyday work, much stronger tooling for developers, better control for admins, and genuinely practical improvements for finance, manufacturing, supply chain, and commerce teams. This is not a cosmetic release. It is a release about leverage. ([Microsoft Learn][2])

The headline story is simple: AI in Business Central is becoming operational. Microsoft’s own overview says it is moving Business Central toward AI-driven ERP, embedding AI and automation into daily processes and expanding AI-powered agents that can handle more complex end-to-end work. That matters because ERP systems have traditionally been incredible systems of record, but not always great systems of action. This wave pushes Business Central much closer to being both. ([Microsoft Learn][2])

One of the smartest additions is the new dedicated task pane for agent tasks. Instead of AI-generated work being scattered across pages and notifications, users get a single place to review suggestions, validations, follow-ups, and draft documents created by agents working across finance, purchasing, sales, and operations. That may sound like a small UX enhancement, but it is actually foundational. If AI is going to help people all day long, users need one clear place to see what the system is asking them to do. This feature turns “AI happened somewhere” into “here is the work, right now, in one queue.” ([Microsoft Learn][3])

Microsoft is also making AI feel more natural inside the page experience itself. In 2026 wave 1, users can review content generated by agents directly where they work, instead of jumping out to a separate pane to understand what was created. Suggested descriptions, text, and field-specific updates can appear inline, where people can evaluate and adjust them before applying them. Combined with the update that marks mailbox messages processed by Payables Agent with a category in Outlook, this is exactly the kind of human-plus-agent design that drives adoption: visible, contextual, and easy to verify. ([Microsoft Learn][4])

The biggest long-term AI story, though, may be the new ability to design custom AI agents in Business Central. Microsoft is opening an in-product design experience through the AI Development Toolkit for Business Central, giving partners, consultants, product owners, domain experts, and power users a way to prototype and test agents in sandbox environments. These agents can be defined with natural-language instructions, run within Business Central’s existing security model, maintain activity timelines, and support human-in-the-loop approvals for sensitive steps. That is a huge leap. It means Business Central is not just shipping more built-in AI; it is laying the groundwork for customers and partners to create their own agentic workflows on top of the same runtime. ([Microsoft Learn][5])

And Microsoft is being thoughtful about trust. The agent design experience is built around traceability, permissions, diagnostics, import/export, and explicit control, not vague black-box automation. Agent definitions can be moved as JSON, tested in sandbox, and refined before anything touches production. In other words, this is not “AI magic.” It is structured, governable automation inside ERP. For the Business Central ecosystem, that is exactly the right way to introduce agentic experiences. ([Microsoft Learn][5])

For developers, this wave is packed with substance. The feature that jumped out immediately is the one you shared: AL developers can use semantic search on data and metadata. Microsoft is exposing semantic ranking through a new “Semantic Data Search” codeunit, letting developers query for records by similarity rather than relying only on exact filters and rigid matching logic. That opens the door to smarter discovery experiences, better assisted lookup scenarios, and more intelligent extensions that can reason over business data and metadata in ways that feel much closer to how users actually search. ([Microsoft Learn][4])

That is only the start. Microsoft is also adding AL test discovery and execution in Visual Studio Code’s Test Explorer, making test workflows feel more modern and native to the dev environment. On top of that, the new Troubleshooting MCP Server for AL lets coding agents reason over live debugging sessions using the actual execution context, including the call stack, variables across frames, and even relevant source code. That is a major step forward for diagnosing complex extension behavior. Together with support for downloading symbols from public or custom NuGet feeds, this wave sends a clear message: Business Central development is getting faster, smarter, and much more AI-assisted. ([Microsoft Learn][4])

Admins are getting their own breakthrough moments too. The new Permissions Overview page brings together permission sets across installed apps and extensions into one unified place, with filters for object, scope, extension, and permission set, plus FactBoxes showing which users and security groups are affected. Anyone who has ever tried to untangle permissions in a layered Business Central environment will understand why this matters. It is not flashy, but it is exactly the kind of capability that reduces security blind spots and makes governance dramatically easier. ([Microsoft Learn][6])

Then there is the Admin Center MCP server, which may become one of the sleeper hits of the release. Microsoft is previewing a Model Context Protocol server that exposes Business Central Admin Center APIs in a standardized way, so MCP-compatible AI tools can answer questions about environment status, upgrades, and installed extensions, and even propose next actions like copying an environment to sandbox or scheduling an update—while still requiring explicit confirmation from the user. This is a very modern vision of administration: conversational, contextual, and still controlled. ([Microsoft Learn][7])

Partners and migration specialists should also pay attention to the cloud transition story. Business Central is extending its cloud migration tooling so developers can build reusable migration engines for any SQL-based source system, packaged as extensions and surfaced through the Cloud Migration wizard. Microsoft is also adding supported tooling for reimplementation projects from older Business Central on-premises versions, starting with Business Central 14 scenarios and focused on essential master data, selected transactions, opening balances, and required setup. That is big. It means more repeatable, less script-heavy migration projects and a more scalable path for partners helping customers move forward without dragging every legacy customization with them. ([Microsoft Learn][8])

The operational side of the release is just as compelling. Business Central is adding approval workflows for item journals and requisition/planning worksheets, so inventory adjustments and planning decisions can be reviewed before posting or conversion into purchasing documents. For many organizations, that is a direct improvement in internal control, auditability, and process discipline. And in manufacturing, Microsoft is introducing subcontracting capabilities that support logistics flows for raw materials and finished goods, warehouse handling, item tracking, and flexible pricing. That is the kind of enhancement manufacturers have been looking for when production spans both internal operations and external partners. ([Microsoft Learn][9])

Finance teams are getting meaningful wins as well. One standout is built-in withholding tax support for vendors, giving customers a standard way to set up, calculate, and report withholding tax without needing a separate app or custom development in countries where it applies. Microsoft is also continuing to expand tax capabilities, including calculations for plastic and sugar taxes in the preview feature details. These may not make splashy headlines, but they are exactly the sort of capabilities that increase the out-of-the-box value of Business Central in real-world deployments. ([Microsoft Learn][10])

Commerce is quietly getting stronger too. The Shopify connector gains the ability to export items with up to three item attributes as Shopify product options, creating better variant structures for dimensions like color, size, and material. Add in support for variant-specific images and custom collections, and it becomes much easier to keep product data consistent between Business Central and Shopify without the usual manual cleanup. For product-heavy businesses, that translates directly into a cleaner storefront and less operational friction. ([Microsoft Learn][11])

So what is the real takeaway from Business Central 2026 wave 1?

It is this: Microsoft is no longer treating AI, admin tooling, developer experience, and core ERP functionality as separate tracks. They are converging. Agents are being embedded into the product experience. Developers are getting semantic and AI-assisted tools. Admins are getting stronger visibility and conversational management. Operations teams are getting better controls and deeper capabilities. That combination is what makes this release feel important. ([Microsoft Learn][2])

Business Central has always been a platform with breadth. In 2026 release wave 1, it starts to feel like a platform with a new kind of momentum. The message is not just that the product is adding features. The message is that Business Central is becoming more proactive, more extensible, and more intelligent at the exact moment customers are asking ERP to do more than record transactions. If this wave lands the way it looks on paper, it will be remembered as one of the releases that changed the conversation around what Business Central can be. ([Microsoft Learn][2])

I can also turn this into a more marketing-style post, a partner-focused version, or a LinkedIn article version.

[1]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/ [2]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/ [3]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/manage-tasks-all-agents-dedicated-task-pane [4]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/business-central/dev-itpro/whatsnew/preview-feature-details [5]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/envision-prototype-custom-ai-agents-using-agent-designer [6]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/audit-user-group-permissions-across-apps [7]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/connect-ai-agents-admin-center-through-mcp-server [8]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/migrate-cloud-sql-database [9]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/approve-requisition-worksheets-item-journals [10]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/calculate-withholding-taxes-vendors [11]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/release-plan/2026wave1/smb/dynamics365-business-central/export-items-shopify-product-options-based-item-attributes

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