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Hi @Domenico96
Thank you for reaching out to the Microsoft Fabric Forum Community.
@danextian @burakkaragoz @Zanqueta @cengizhanarslan Thanks for the inputs.
The information provided by users was helpful. please try those, If you still have questions, please don't hesitate to reach out to the community.
Hi @Domenico96
Hope everything’s going smoothly on your end. I wanted to check if the issue got sorted. if you have any other issues please reach community.
Disabling “Include in report refresh” for Sales 2024 means that table will not be refreshed in Power BI Service, but its data will still be used by the appended table.
When you publish the report, Power BI does not perform a full refresh. Only tables with refresh enabled (for example, Sales 2025) will refresh. The appended table will recompute using cached Sales 2024 data and fresh Sales 2025 data.
Hi @Domenico96
If this response was helpful in any way, I’d gladly accept a 👍much like the joy of seeing a DAX measure work first time without needing another FILTER.
Please mark it as the correct solution. It helps other community members find their way faster (and saves them from another endless loop 🌀.
Hi @Domenico96 ,
@danextian is absolutely correct regarding the dependencies. I want to add a practical explanation of "Why" this happens, as it is often counter-intuitive.
The Short Answer: Yes, the dataset will still perform a full refresh and it will still query the Sales 2024 source.
The Logic (The "Ingredients" Analogy): Think of your Appended Table as a Cake, and Sales 2024 as the Eggs.
Even if you decide not to serve the Eggs separately on a plate (Unchecking "Enable Load" or "Include in Refresh" for the individual table)...
...whenever you want to bake a fresh Cake (The Appended Table), Power BI must go to the fridge and get the Eggs (Sales 2024) to mix them in.
What that checkbox actually does: Unchecking "Include in report refresh" only stops Power BI from updating the standalone Sales 2024 table itself. However, because your Appended Table depends on Sales 2024, the Power Query engine creates a background query to fetch that 2024 data to build the final appended list.
The Performance Impact: If your goal was to save time by not reloading historical data, unchecking that box does not work for Appended tables in standard Power BI Desktop. The engine still reads the source.
Solution: To truly stop reading historical data, you would need to implement Incremental Refresh or use Dataflows to stage the history once.
Hope this clears up the confusion!
If my response resolved your query, kindly mark it as the Accepted Solution to assist others. Additionally, I would be grateful for a 'Kudos' if you found my response helpful.
This response was assisted by AI for translation and formatting purposes.
Hi @Domenico96
All referenced queries are still evaluated separately during refresh, even if they are set not to load, as long as the final query that depends on them is loaded and refreshed. A query is only skipped during refresh if it is neither loaded nor referenced, or if it was previously loaded and later excluded from refresh. Please read this: Referencing Power Query queries
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