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Dynamics GP vs Business Central: Feature Comparison Checklist

Written by Reese Summers | Apr 2, 2026 3:15:20 PM

If you have been running Dynamics GP for a while, you already know what it does well. The financials are solid. The core accounting works. For a lot of organizations, it has been reliable for years.


But the world your business operates in today looks different than it did when GP was built. This checklist breaks down exactly where Business Central picks up where GP leaves off, so you can see the gap clearly and decide what it means for your organization.

What Business Central Adds Beyond GP


Business Central covers the core functionality GP users depend on every day, financials, AR/AP, inventory, and purchasing. What changes is what the platform adds beyond that foundation:

  • Cloud-native architecture
  • Built-in automation
  • AI-powered forecasting
  • Embedded analytics
  • Modern dimensional accounting
  • Native Microsoft ecosystem integration
  • Continuous innovation through regular platform updates

The sections below break down each of these areas in detail.

Side-by-Side: Dynamics GP vs Business Central Features

Here is how the two platforms compare across eight capability areas, with context on what each difference means for the organizations running these systems day to day.

1. Cloud and Platform Capabilities

Capability

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Cloud-native SaaS

Primarily on-prem

Fully cloud-native

Browser access

Limited

Full browser access

Mobile access

Limited

Native mobile support

Automatic updates

Manual upgrades

Monthly automatic updates

Microsoft-managed hosting

Customer/partner managed

Microsoft-managed

What This Means for Your Team
Business Central helps you lessen the overall server maintenance, SQL management, and patching your IT team handles today. Microsoft manages uptime, backups, and security compliance on your behalf. For organizations looking to reduce infrastructure overhead, that shift alone changes the internal resource conversation significantly.

2. Microsoft 365 and Power Platform Integration

Integration

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Outlook integration

Basic

Embedded

Teams integration

Limited

Native

Excel connectivity

Strong

Embedded + enhanced

Power BI dashboards

External setup

Embedded

Power Apps

Third-party effort

Native low-code

Power Automate workflows

Limited

Built-in

What Business Central Adds
Out-of-the-box integration with Microsoft 365 and the Power Platform gives your team embedded dashboards, automated workflows, low-code custom apps, and real-time collaboration without the third-party tooling that GP integrations typically require. If your organization is already working in Microsoft 365, Business Central plugs into that environment rather than working around it.

3. Built-In AI and Copilot Capabilities

AI Capability

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Cash-flow forecasting

AI-assisted

Late payment prediction

Built-in

Natural language queries

Copilot-enabled

AI journal suggestions

Intelligent suggestions

Business Central comes with AI capabilities built in, including cash flow forecasting, late payment prediction, intelligent journal suggestions, and Copilot-powered queries. Not as add-ons. Not through a third-party integration. They are part of the platform from day one.

GP does not offer any of this natively. For finance teams that are still doing manually what Business Central handles automatically, that is a real operational gap and one that widens every year as the platform continues to evolve.

4. Accounting Structure: Dimensional Flexibility

Accounting Model

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Fixed account segments

Dimensional accounting

Limited

Flexible dimensions

Why This Actually Matters
Most GP users hit the same wall eventually. The business grows, reporting gets more specific, and the fixed account segment structure starts working against you.


Business Central's dimensional accounting lets you analyze financials by department, region, project, or custom attributes without restructuring your chart of accounts. The reporting flexibility scales with the business.

5. Accounts Receivable Automation

AR Feature

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Dunning reminders

Limited/manual

Automated

Recurring invoices

Add-ons

Native

AR dashboards

Limited

Built-in

Automated workflows

Limited

Power Automate

What This Means for AR Teams
Manual AR processes are one of the more common pain points for GP users. Business Central addresses that directly with native dunning reminders, recurring invoices, and automated workflows that reduce the manual follow-up your team handles today. For organizations processing high volumes of receivables, these are not minor conveniences. They are meaningful time savings.

6. End-to-End Functional Coverage

If you have been running GP for any length of time, you probably know the patchwork that comes with it. A module here, an ISV solution there, a custom integration holding two things together that were never quite designed to talk to each other.

Here is how the two platforms compare on coverage:

Business Central includes natively:

  • Financials
  • Purchasing
  • Inventory
  • Supply planning
  • Warehousing
  • Projects
  • Service management (Premium license)
  • Manufacturing (Premium license)

GP typically requires:

  • Additional modules
  • ISV solutions
  • Custom integrations

7. Customization and Extensibility

Customization Approach

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Traditional development

Heavy reliance

Reduced

Low-code apps

Limited

Power Apps

Workflow automation

Manual

Power Automate

API ecosystem

Limited

Modern APIs

With Business Central, your team does not need a developer every time a process needs to change. Low-code tools through the Power Platform let you build workflows, automate tasks, and extend functionality on your own timeline without the back-and-forth that GP customizations typically require.

For organizations that have accumulated years of GP customizations, this represents a meaningful change in how ongoing system management works.

8. Innovation and Roadmap

Innovation Model

Dynamics GP

Business Central

Upgrade cycle

Traditional

Continuous cloud updates

AI roadmap

Limited

Active Copilot investment

Support horizon

Finite

Ongoing cloud investment

Business Central receives monthly feature updates and ongoing Microsoft investment in AI, Copilot, and platform capabilities. The platform you implement today will be meaningfully more capable in two to three years than it is now.

GP operates on a defined and finite support timeline. Product support ends December 31, 2029. After that date, innovation stops entirely. For organizations evaluating a long-term ERP investment, that contrast matters.

What Business Central Adds That GP Does Not

  • Cloud-native infrastructure
  • Browser & mobile access
  • Automatic updates
  • Embedded Microsoft 365 integration
  • Power Platform automation
  • Built-in AI & Copilot tools
  • Flexible dimensional accounting
  • Stronger AR automation
  • Stronger native distribution functionality
  • Stronger native manufacturing functionality
  • Continuous innovation roadmap
  • Scalable subscription model

GP handles the core ERP fundamentals that you are used to. Business Central extends well beyond them. The question worth asking is whether the gap between the two aligns with where your business is heading.

When Feature Comparison Becomes a Business Decision

Feature checklists are a useful starting point. But the more important question is whether these capabilities align with where your business is actually going.


If your organization is growing through acquisition, expanding locations, increasing compliance complexity, investing in automation, or working to reduce IT overhead, the features Business Central adds are not just enhancements. They are the infrastructure those goals run on.


A checklist tells you what is different. A strategic conversation tells you what that difference means for your organization specifically.

Ready to Explore Your Migration Path?

Understanding the feature differences between Dynamics GP and Business Central is a good first step. The more valuable conversation is what those differences mean for your specific environment, your workflows, your integrations, your reporting requirements, and your growth plans.

We work with GP customers on this transition every day. That means we know where the complexity tends to hide, what questions to ask early, and how to build a plan that accounts for your actual environment rather than an ideal one. If you are starting to evaluate your options, that kind of experience is worth having in your corner early.