Join us for an expert-led overview of the tools and concepts you'll need to pass exam PL-300. The first session starts on June 11th. See you there!
Get registeredJoin us at FabCon Vienna from September 15-18, 2025, for the ultimate Fabric, Power BI, SQL, and AI community-led learning event. Save €200 with code FABCOMM. Get registered
I'm seeking clarification on how batch cycles are calculated in the Microsoft Fabric Capacity Calculator.
In our current setup, one of our pipelines (NRT) runs every 15 minutes, resulting in 96 runs per day. However, I noticed that the calculator still treats this as only 1 batch cycle.
From what I understand:
All 96 runs follow the same data processing logic.
It’s a continuous ingestion process, not 96 distinct end-to-end flows.
There’s no branching logic or different processing pathways across the runs.
My question:
In such cases, should we input “1” or “96” for batch cycles in the calculator?
If the logic and transformation remain constant across all runs, does it still count as 1 batch cycle despite the high execution frequency?
Or
Should we only increment the batch cycle count if there are multiple, distinct pipelines or processing variations?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @Debadutta ,
Thank you for reaching out to us on the Microsoft Fabric Community Forum.
Please go through the Microsoft Fabric updates blog which helps in the resolving the issue.
Mastering SKU Estimations with the Microsoft Fabric SKU Estimator | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsof...
If this post was helpful, please give us Kudos and consider marking Accept as solution to assist other members in finding it more easily.
Hi @Debadutta ,
From what I’ve learned (and confirmed through Microsoft’s documentation), the "Batch cycles per day" field in the Fabric Capacity Calculator isn’t about how often a pipeline runs, it’s about how many unique workflows you have.
Your pipeline runs every 15 minutes (so 96 times a day)
Each run follows the same logic no branching or different processing steps
Because of that, even though it runs frequently, it’s still considered just one batch cycle in the calculator. The calculator is really measuring the complexity and number of different jobs, not how many times one job runs.
You’d only increase the batch cycle count if:
You’re running multiple pipelines with different logic
You have workflows with significantly different processing paths
Or you're handling very different types of data in each job
Here’s the reference from Microsoft’s official documentation:
👉 https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/fabric/enterprise/fabric-sku-estimator
Hi @Debadutta ,
From what I’ve learned (and confirmed through Microsoft’s documentation), the "Batch cycles per day" field in the Fabric Capacity Calculator isn’t about how often a pipeline runs, it’s about how many unique workflows you have.
Your pipeline runs every 15 minutes (so 96 times a day)
Each run follows the same logic no branching or different processing steps
Because of that, even though it runs frequently, it’s still considered just one batch cycle in the calculator. The calculator is really measuring the complexity and number of different jobs, not how many times one job runs.
You’d only increase the batch cycle count if:
You’re running multiple pipelines with different logic
You have workflows with significantly different processing paths
Or you're handling very different types of data in each job
Here’s the reference from Microsoft’s official documentation:
👉 https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/fabric/enterprise/fabric-sku-estimator
Hi @Debadutta ,
I wanted to check if you had the opportunity to review the information provided. Please feel free to contact us if you have any further questions. If my response has addressed your query, please accept it as a solution so that other community members can find it easily.
Best Regards,
Menaka.
Community Support Team
Hi @Debadutta ,
May I ask if you have resolved this issue? If so, please mark the helpful reply and accept it as the solution. This will be helpful for other community members who have similar problems to solve it faster.
Thank you
Hi @Debadutta ,
Thanks for reaching out to the Microsoft fabric community forum.
I wanted to check if you had the opportunity to review the information provided. Please feel free to contact us if you have any further questions. If my response has addressed your query, please accept it as a solution so that other community members can find it easily.
Best Regards,
Menaka.
Community Support Team
Hello @Debadatta - The number of daily batch cycles should be entered as 'how often you run full end-to-end processing. If you have many load schedules for individual tables, consider this as a single batch window.'
If this post helps to answer your questions, please consider marking it as a solution so others can find it more quickly when faced with a similar challenge.
Proud to be a Microsoft Fabric Super User
Hi @Debadutta ,
Thank you for reaching out to us on the Microsoft Fabric Community Forum.
Please go through the Microsoft Fabric updates blog which helps in the resolving the issue.
Mastering SKU Estimations with the Microsoft Fabric SKU Estimator | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsof...
If this post was helpful, please give us Kudos and consider marking Accept as solution to assist other members in finding it more easily.
This is your chance to engage directly with the engineering team behind Fabric and Power BI. Share your experiences and shape the future.
User | Count |
---|---|
9 | |
4 | |
3 | |
3 | |
2 |