Our new BIChart Enterprise release is an important step forward in how teams assess, plan, and execute Tableau to Power BI migration.
This release expands BIChart beyond automated conversion and brings the product closer to the real workflow enterprise teams need when moving from Tableau to Power BI or Microsoft Fabric.
The major updates include:
- An integrated Tableau assessment
- Native publishing to Microsoft Fabric
- Revised user experience
- Microsoft single sign-on
- Analytics & reports for Tableau org.
- Automation of repetitive migration work
The path to BIChart Enterprise
Our latest BIChart Enterprise release is the result of observations and continuous feedback from customers, partners, and enterprise migration projects. Our team is positioned to move hundreds of thousands of assets into Microsoft Fabric and Power BI.
Our early versions of BIChart, the focus was on proving that Tableau workbooks could be converted into Power BI with meaningful automation. We have continued an aggressive path with waves of production-grade observations.
Integrated Tableau Assessment
The integrated Tableau assessment is built around a simple idea. Before a team can migrate with confidence, they need to understand the Tableau environment they already have. BIChart Enterprise allows a seamless single-click execution of migration from our assessment.

We think of this as BI on BI with an ability to take immediate action. It helps teams identify:
- redundant and unused workbooks
- embedded data sources
- connection sprawl
- ownership gap
- published data source dependencies
- usage patterns, subscriptions
BIChart Tableau assessment produces output for different audiences. Leaders get a summary dashboard to understand scope, complexity, and migration effort. Project teams get detailed workbook-level reporting and Excel workbooks across assets, views, users, subscriptions, data sources, and related metadata.
Microsoft SSO and Fabric publishing
This release also adds Microsoft single sign-on. It is a small but crucial step as BIChart continues to expand into the Microsoft ecosystem and support enterprise organizations.
Native publishing to Microsoft Fabric is another important feature for automated workflows. The destination for customers is no longer just a Power BI project file. It is a governed Fabric environment where reports, semantic models, workspaces, security, deployment, and data assets come together.
A simpler user experience
This release also includes a revised and simplified user experience.
The goal is not cosmetics. It is to make BIChart easier to use as migration work becomes more complex and more organizations bring larger portfolios of Tableau content into the process. The revised UX also sets the stage for integrated metadata and connectivity across Tableau and Microsoft Fabric.
The role of AI for Tableau to Power BI Migration with BIChart
This release also reflects our practical view of AI that is evolving. BIChart continues to operate with or without AI assistance. We use AI in all facets of our own business and continuously work with the latest and greatest Power BI MCP, M365 Copilot, Fabric IQ, and other open-source tools.
Our approach to AI has been using automation where workloads need to be declarative and repeatable. We then utilize AI which helps teams understand, document, organize, and accelerate the broader migration process.
What is next for BIChart Tableau to Power BI Migration?
The road ahead for BIChart deeper Microsoft Fabric integration, stronger quality assurance, more migration validation, broader automation coverage, and more predictable outcomes across large portfolios of Tableau workbooks.
We have incredible partnerships that we have forged, and we are building delivery support and packaging to support system integrators who choose BIChart as their platform to accelerate migrations.
Sign up now, and get access to the latest BIChart today!