Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

Billing for Anomaly Detector in Real-Time Intelligence

We have an important update for customers using Anomaly Detector in Microsoft Fabric’s Real-Time Intelligence (RTI). This feature, currently in Preview, helps you spot unusual patterns in streaming data from Eventhouse tables—without the need for complex data science tools. It’s designed to make anomaly detection simple, fast, and accessible.

What does billing entail?

Starting in December, Anomaly Detector usage will begin accruing charges. To make billing clear and straightforward, we’ve introduced a single dedicated meter:

  • Meter Name: Anomaly Detector Queries Capacity Usage CU
  • Operation Name: Anomaly Detection Run Queries

This meter captures all Capacity Unit (CU) consumption for anomaly detection, whether you’re running interactive analyses or monitoring data continuously in the background.

What Does This Mean for You?

Every time you run anomaly detection—whether analyzing historical data or keeping an eye on live streams—queries are executed behind the scenes. These queries are what drive CU consumption, and now you’ll see that usage reported under one unified meter. Billing is based on query execution, not the size of your data, so you can predict costs more easily.

Usage details will appear in the Microsoft Fabric Capacity Metrics app and in your Azure, billing reports, giving you full visibility into how anomaly detection impacts your capacity.

Learn more about Anomaly Detector billing.

Related blog posts

Billing for Anomaly Detector in Real-Time Intelligence

March 12, 2026 by Ansley Yeo

With the introduction of Rules in Ontology, Fabric IQ takes a step forward in connecting business operations to real-time action by integrating Fabric Activator directly into Ontology. Fabric IQ brings context to your data. Activator in Fabric IQ operationalizes your ontology. What are Ontology Rules with Fabric Activator? Ontology Rules let you define conditions and … Continue reading “From insight to action: Bringing Fabric Activator into Ontology with Rules”

March 12, 2026 by Mehrsa Golestaneh

Agentic apps are moving quickly from prototypes to real workloads. But once you go beyond a proof of concept (POC), the hard part isn’t getting an agent to respond; it’s knowing what the agent did, whether it was safe and correct, and how it’s impacting the business. Let’s explore what it takes to operationalize agentic … Continue reading “Operationalizing Agentic Applications with Microsoft Fabric”