SQL Server 2025 and Microsoft Fabric: Integration Patterns and Trade-offs
Proposed session for SQLBits 2026TL; DR
This session explores the main ways to integrate SQL Server 2025 with Microsoft Fabric and the trade-offs each approach introduces. We compare classic ETL (including pipeline-based ingestion) with newer near-real-time options such as Mirroring and Change Event Streams (CES). Using practical scenarios, the session focuses on how these patterns differ in latency, operational complexity, schema evolution, and cost. Attendees leave with a clear framework for choosing the right integration approach for their workloads.
Session Details
With SQL Server 2025, integration with Microsoft Fabric becomes a core architectural decision rather than a simple data movement task. Teams now have multiple ways to integrate SQL Server with Fabric, each with different implications for latency, complexity, cost, and operational effort.
In this session, we explore the main integration patterns between SQL Server 2025 and Fabric. We start with classic ETL approaches, including pipeline-based ingestion, and then compare them with newer near-real-time options such as Mirroring (in its different variants) and Change Event Streams (CES). Rather than presenting these as competing features, we focus on the problems each pattern is designed to solve—and the trade-offs they introduce.
Using practical scenarios and real project experience, we examine how these approaches differ in terms of data freshness, schema evolution, monitoring and operations, and cost behavior. The emphasis is on understanding how each option behaves in real systems, not just how it works in isolation.
By the end of the session, attendees will have a clear mental model for SQL Server–Fabric integration and the confidence to choose the right pattern for their workloads—whether they need batch analytics, near-real-time insights, or a hybrid approach.
In this session, we explore the main integration patterns between SQL Server 2025 and Fabric. We start with classic ETL approaches, including pipeline-based ingestion, and then compare them with newer near-real-time options such as Mirroring (in its different variants) and Change Event Streams (CES). Rather than presenting these as competing features, we focus on the problems each pattern is designed to solve—and the trade-offs they introduce.
Using practical scenarios and real project experience, we examine how these approaches differ in terms of data freshness, schema evolution, monitoring and operations, and cost behavior. The emphasis is on understanding how each option behaves in real systems, not just how it works in isolation.
By the end of the session, attendees will have a clear mental model for SQL Server–Fabric integration and the confidence to choose the right pattern for their workloads—whether they need batch analytics, near-real-time insights, or a hybrid approach.
3 things you'll get out of this session
After attending this session, attendees will be able to:
- Understand the available integration patterns between SQL Server 2025 and Microsoft Fabric and how they differ in practice.
- Evaluate trade-offs between classic ETL, Mirroring, and CES based on workload requirements.
- Make informed integration decisions aligned with data freshness, operational effort, and cost expectations.
- Avoid common pitfalls by understanding how these integration options behave in real-world scenario
Speakers
Margarita Naumova's other proposed sessions for 2026
Large Tables, Big Problems: Indexing, Partitioning, and Archiving at Scale - 2026
A Deep Dive into Table Partitioning – Part 1: Mechanics and Performance - 2026
A Deep Dive into Table Partitioning – Part 2: Design, Maintenance, and Troubleshooting - 2026
From Load to Logic: Designing for Performance in Microsoft Fabric Warehouses - 2026
SQL Server 2025 Optimized Locking and ADR: Practical Internals for Real Systems - 2026
Warehouse loading – tips and tricks for better performance - 2026