Week in Review: April 4, 2026
Just Published
This section includes videos, articles, and (occasionally) open-source project updates from the past 7 days.
Articles
*Article descriptions generated by Claude-Sonnet-4.5.
- Official Access Blog
- Access fixes released in Version 2603 (Build 19822.20114): Microsoft Access Version 2603 includes fixes for Edge Browser control navigation issues, Unicode character display problems, Modern Chart title truncation in Print Preview, color palette mismatches with other Office apps, and query execution bugs when accessing field precision/scale properties.
- Daniel Pineault (DEVelopers HUT)
- The Case of the Disappearing Flow Variable Values: Documents a Power Automate bug where 'Set variable' actions lose their values when editing or saving flows, recommending backup copies as a workaround.
- Colin Riddington (Isladogs on Access)
- Access / Office Bug Summary - Mar 2026: Reports one March 2026 bug causing Access crashes or error 438 when opening reports in Current Channel Preview, fixed within days, plus numerous Beta Channel fixes.
- Crystal Long (Ms Access Gurus | Access Access Newsletter)
- Write Word Hyperlink Information to Excel: A VBA solution extracts hyperlink information from Word documents into Excel spreadsheets, capturing paragraph numbers, link numbers, text displays, addresses, and subaddresses for easier tracking and organization.
- Document Word Hyperlinks to Excel using VBA: Provides downloadable VBA code to extract all hyperlinks from the active Word document into a new Excel workbook with text, address, subaddress, and optional paragraph context.
- Mike Wolfe (NoLongerSet)
- Throwback Thursday: April 2, 2026: Revisits articles on problems with VBA global constants and preferred alternatives, plus coding humor.
Videos
- Richard Rost (YouTube channel)
- Suddenly Forget?! (39:07): Why Does Microsoft Access Suddenly Forget Built-In Functions Like Date and Format? - QQ #86
- Access Day 2026 (24:14): Access Day 2026 Review: New Features Revealed by Microsoft & Insights from the Access Community
- Clippy is Back! (03:23): Microsoft Access is Getting a New Powerful AI Version of Your Favorite Assistant.
- Multi-Level Menu (28:10): How to Build a Data-Driven Multi-Level Menu in Microsoft Access Using a List Box - Fitness #73
- Dynamic Menu (17:38): How to Build a Dynamic Menu System in Microsoft Access Using a List Box - Fitness #72
New to Me
This section includes content I discovered this week that has been around for a while.
- Nothing new this week.
Upcoming Access User Group Events
NOTE: Only English-language user group meetings with scheduled guest speakers or topics are listed. For a complete list of upcoming events, visit the Access User Group event calendar.
NOTE: At the time of publication, the accessusergroups.org website was returning a 504 Gateway Timeout error. The events listed below are unchanged from last week's week in review article.
- [April 16-17, 2026] Access DevCon Vienna (virtual)
- Access Team (Oleg Ouliankine, Linda Lu Cannon, Shane Groff, Courtney Owen, Sachin Arunkumar): News from the Access Team
- Karl Donaubauer: Access Community Update
- Juan Soto: Using AI as your Access Development Assistant
- Alessandro Grimaldi: Ribbonizer, the Ultimate Access Ribbon Creator
- Mike Wolfe: Practical twinBASIC: Use Cases for Access Developers
- Andrew Richards & Peter Bryant: GraphAuthenticator
- Kevin Bell: Stop blaming Access – turn SQL Server into your secret weapon
- [May 6, 2026] Tim Finch: Grid Lanes
- [June 3, 2026] Kevin Bell: SQL Server Tips and Tricks for Access Developers
- [September 2, 2026] John Mallinson: Working with the Windows API
Access Roadmap
The following changes were made to the roadmap between the Week in Review last week (2026-03-28) and this week (2026-04-04):
- Add zoom slider magnification to Microsoft Access: Rollout start date updated from
OCT 2025toAPR 2026 - Modernize Access Forms and Reports to work well on Large Format Monitors: Rollout start date updated from
DEC 2025toJUN 2026
The roadmap was last updated April 3, 2026.
Listed below is a snapshot of the official Access Roadmap.
"In Development", "Rolling Out", and "Launched" are Microsoft terms that I pulled straight from the public roadmap. Dates listed are "rollout start" dates.
In Development
APR 2026: Add zoom slider magnification to Microsoft Access: Access will add magnification slider (10% to 500%) in lower right of the application, similar to the feature in Word, PowerPoint, and Excel. It will also be keyboard accessible and available on the ribbon.JUN 2026: Modernize Access Forms and Reports to work well on Large Format Monitors: Remove the 22-inch size limit and modernize Access forms and reports [to] work well on large format monitors and provide responsive behavior for different form factors.
Rolling Out
None listed.
Launched
None listed.
Development Priorities
"Development Priorities" do not appear on the Access Roadmap. Instead, they get updated from time to time in official Access blog posts or Access engineering team presentations. I'll include a link to the source of the current development priorities as they get updated.
The items listed below reflect Microsoft's order of priority and were published in the following Access Forever article, Microsoft's Plans for Access Oct '25 – March '26.
- Continued focus on monthly issue fixes, security, customer-reported bugs, etc. to improve product quality, security, reliability, and relevance. Most of our engineering hours are spent here.
- Large monitor support: Remove 22” limitation to support using Access on modern hardware.
- Large monitor support: Enable zoom slider magnification for forms.
- Large monitor support: Modernize forms to work well on large monitors.
- Time allowing, we’ll continue to work on remaining large monitor support features (support zoom in reports and design layout, automatic zooming, support multiple monitor scenarios).
- If we still have time left over in the semester, we will begin work on Git integration for source code management in Access. (Spec is in progress. We will likely roll this out in phases also beginning the second half of 2026.)
Special thanks to Karl Donaubauer for posting the updated priorities at AccessForever.org.
Upcoming End-of-Life Dates
Here are the key end-of-life dates Access developers should track:
2024
SQL Server 2014[JUL 09]
2025
Access 2016 | Access 2019 | Office 2016 | Office 2019[OCT 14]Windows 10[OCT 14]Salesforce ODBC Driver[OCT 28]Windows 11 version 23H2[NOV 11]
2026
[JUL 14]SQL Server 2016[OCT 13]Access 2021 | Office 2021[OCT 13]Windows 11 version 24H2
2027
[JAN 12]Windows Server 2016[MAR 01]Auto-migration of Classic Outlook begins for Enterprise users (originally scheduled for April 2026, but postponed to March 2027)[OCT 12]SQL Server 2017
2029
[JAN 09]Windows Server 2019[OCT 09]Access 2024 | Outlook 2024[OCT 09(or later)]Classic Outlook- See "Edit 8/12/2024" at top of this article for official clarification that "both perpetual and subscription [i.e., MS 365] versions of Outlook will be supported until 2029"
- Support for Classic Outlook is guaranteed at least through 9 Oct 2029; it may be extended beyond this date
2030
[JAN 08]SQL Server 2019
2031
[OCT 14]Windows Server 2022
2033
[JAN 11]SQL Server 2022
2034
[OCT 10]Windows Server 2025
Ongoing
- Microsoft 365 (with subscription)
Date TBD
- Complete removal of VBScript from Windows OS (Microsoft Announces the Death of VBScript)