Blog Post

The Skills Hub Blog
4 MIN READ

Microsoft Credentials roundup: February 2026 edition

PujaA's avatar
PujaA
Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft
Feb 26, 2026

Discover new Microsoft Certifications and Microsoft Applied Skills, now open to all.

February 2026 brings major updates to Microsoft Credentials—four new Microsoft Certifications and six new Microsoft Applied Skills now generally available (GA). Designed to help you keep your skills current in today’s AI-powered workplace, they demonstrate the AI abilities that employers need in not only technical but also business roles.

In this roundup, we cover what’s new, what’s changing, and what’s coming up.

What’s new: Certifications

We’ve introduced four new AI Certifications—all available now—that verify skills for technical and non-technical professionals. These credentials certify your ability to use AI in real-world roles, helping to ensure that you can drive innovation and productivity with this technology. Whether you’re an IT administrator, solution architect, business user, or organizational leader, there’s a new Certification to help boost your career growth.

For technical professionals (IT pros, developers, architects)
For business professionals (managers, analysts, decision-makers)

Each Certification page on Microsoft Learn offers resources for self-paced and instructor-led training, study guides, and exam prep to help set you up for success.

What’s new: Applied Skills

Applied Skills are another powerful option for showcasing your expertise. These short, practical assessments let you demonstrate specific real-world skills in an interactive lab environment. They’re now even more relevant to AI-powered roles, since they help prepare you to earn role-based Certifications. We’ve expanded the portfolio with new AI scenarios across technical and business roles, and the new credentials are even faster to earn, most of their lab-based assessments lets you prove specific skills in just 45 minutes.

For technical roles (developers, engineers, IT pros)
For business roles

Retiring older credentials

To keep things current, we’ve retired a few Certifications and Applied Skills. If you’ve already earned these, they’ll remain on the transcript in your Microsoft Learn profile.

The following Certifications retired on December 31, 2025:
  • Microsoft Certified: Dynamics 365 Fundamentals (CRM) (Exam MB-910)
  • Microsoft Certified: Dynamics 365 Fundamentals (ERP) (Exam MB-920)
The following Applied Skills retired on January 30, 2026:
  • Microsoft Applied Skills: Build an Azure AI Vision solution
  • Microsoft Applied Skills: Deploy and manage Azure Arc–enabled servers
  • Microsoft Applied Skills: Develop an ASP.NET Core web app that consumes an API
  • Microsoft Applied Skills: Implement a data science and machine learning solution with Microsoft Fabric
  • Microsoft Applied Skills: Implement a Lakehouse in Microsoft Fabric

Looking ahead

These updates are just the beginning. We continuously evolve our credentials portfolio to align with the skills needed for AI-driven jobs, and a new wave of AI-focused Certification updates is scheduled for March 2026 and beyond. Expect even more opportunities to learn and to earn credentials in AI and cloud technologies. We look forward to carrying this momentum forward and to supporting you on your learning journey.

 

Explore Credentials on AI Skills Navigator

 

Updated Mar 10, 2026
Version 3.0

9 Comments

  • DrDODO's avatar
    DrDODO
    Copper Contributor

    Thank you for highlighting the new Microsoft Credentials—especially the business-focused AB‑730 and AB‑731 tracks. 

    I completed the AB‑730 and AB-731 learning contents. I appreciate the intended goal: validating the practical use of generative AI and Copilot to improve business outcomes without requiring coding.

    My experience would have been stronger with the certification process if there were tighter quality control on exam question clarity and closer alignment between module checks and exam expectations.

    One constructive suggestion from my learner experience: please keep improving exam clarity and alignment. Specifically, it would help to (1) reduce ambiguity through tighter question wording/grammar, (2) ensure knowledge checks better reflect the style and depth of the exam, and (3) add more “exam-like” scenario practice that mirrors real question structure.
    I believe AB‑730 can become a strong signal for AI fluency in business roles, and I’d love to see the assessment experience match the quality and importance of the credential’s intent.
    If there’s a formal way to submit feedback on specific items, I’m happy to contribute.

  • devsh's avatar
    devsh
    Copper Contributor

    What's the reason for APL-1010 retirement? Was it too hard, too resource taxing, misaligned with the AZ-104 scope, or something else?

    Also, credentials journey poster for Azure Administrator needs refreshing since it still references this applied skill.

    https://arch-center.azureedge.net/Credentials/Credential-Journey-Azure-Administrator.pdf

  • willdotnet's avatar
    willdotnet
    Copper Contributor

    So lots going on and sounds exciting. I am about to renew AI102, so think I'll grab that whilst I can. After that I was planning AZ 204 and then AZ 305 . Would I be right say I should do AI 200 after my 102 renewal, then look at doing 305 or backfill 103?

  • KevinM1981's avatar
    KevinM1981
    Brass Contributor

    Is there a reason the fundamentals/associate level exams are double the cost in the US market compared to say India or the Phillipines? There are many IT professionals that work outside the commercial space, for example nonprofits, that are being eaten alive by inflation and the cost of living here in the states and Microsoft doesn't offer any type of discounts to our sector

  • nano73's avatar
    nano73
    Copper Contributor

    When will a training path for the AB-100 certification be available?
    Answer: 3/27/26 (https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/training/courses/ab-100t00)