Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

New regions supported for Fabric User Data Functions

Fabric User Data Functions is a serverless platform that allows you to build and run functions on the Fabric platform. You can use your functions to interact with your data and the rest of your Fabric items via native integrations.

After the Fabric User Data Functions preview, we have been working on increasing the number of regions supported for this feature. We have recently added the following 14 new regions where you can use this feature from:

  • Australia Southeast​
  • Brazil South
  • Canada Central​
  • Central India
  • France Central​
  • Korea Central
  • North Central US
  • Norway East​
  • South Africa North​
  • South India​
  • UAE North​
  • UK West​
  • West Europe​
  • West US​

You can find the full list of supported regions in this article: Fabric Region Availability. This article will be frequently updated to reflect the latest region support. If you have any questions or would like to submit any feedback, please reach out to FabricUserDataFunctionsPreview@service.microsoft.com.

Resources

  1. Fabric User Data Functions documentation.
  2. Check out our YouTube demo video.
  3. Read the blog post for using User Data Functions with Fabric Data pipelines

Gerelateerde blogberichten

New regions supported for Fabric User Data Functions

april 14, 2026 door Tzvia Gitlin Troyna

Modern analytics isn’t just about storing data. It’s about detecting issues early, understanding them fast, and acting with confidence. Eventhouse in Microsoft Fabric brings advanced analytics capabilities together so teams can move from raw events to insight and action without stitching tools or duplicating data. With native integrations for Anomaly Detection, Data Agents, SQL Endpoints, … Continue reading “One platform, many insights: How Eventhouse brings analytics together (Preview)”

april 14, 2026 door Tzvia Gitlin Troyna

Modern, real-time analytics workloads are rarely flat. In Eventhouse, some of the customers consistently told us that their usage follows clear, predictable patterns: heavy ingestion during business hours, lighter query traffic overnight, quiet weekends, and short but critical pipeline windows. Previously, customers had to choose a single minimum capacity value for the entire week, paying … Continue reading “Capacity Scheduler: Smarter capacity control for Eventhouse (Preview)”