On May 5, 2026, Salesforce sent a product notification that many administrators had been dreading — and many more hadn't seen coming: "ATTENTION: Migrate from Lightning Sync to Einstein Activity Capture."
The message was direct: Microsoft is retiring Exchange Web Services (EWS) in October 2026. Lightning Sync depends on EWS to connect Salesforce with Microsoft 365. When EWS goes dark, Lightning Sync goes with it. No workaround. No extension. No exception.
If your Salesforce org still uses Lightning Sync for email and calendar synchronization, you have approximately five months to complete a two-step migration to Einstein Activity Capture (EAC) and Microsoft Graph API. Miss the deadline, and your teams will wake up one morning to find that every automated email log, every calendar sync, and every contact update between Salesforce and Microsoft has simply... stopped.
This guide provides everything you need to execute a successful migration — from understanding the technical differences between Lightning Sync and EAC, to a week-by-week project plan, to the common pitfalls that trip up even experienced Salesforce admins. We also cover what EAC gives you that Lightning Sync never could, including AI-powered activity insights, Agentforce integration, and modern security architecture.
Related reading: If you haven't already addressed the May 2026 EAC configuration requirement, read our companion guide: Einstein Activity Capture Configuration Changes: What Salesforce Admins Must Do Before May 2026. That post covers the configuration assignment deadline; this post covers the full Lightning Sync migration.
Lightning Sync was deprecated in Winter '21 (late 2020). Salesforce stopped making it available to new orgs and announced Einstein Activity Capture as the future of email and calendar sync. For five years, the migration was strongly recommended but not enforced.
Now it's enforced — not by Salesforce, but by Microsoft.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| July 2018 | Microsoft announces EWS will receive no new features |
| 2023 | Microsoft sets the EWS disablement date for October 2026 |
| January 2024 | The Midnight Blizzard security incident (involving EWS) accelerates deprecation urgency |
| 2025 | Microsoft releases EWS Usage Reports, Analyzer tools, and AI-assisted migration tutorials |
| October 2026 | EWS begins phased global disablement for all organizations |
| April 2027 | EWS is fully disabled — no exceptions |
The Midnight Blizzard incident in January 2024 was a nation-state cyberattack that exploited EWS, dramatically elevating the security case for deprecation. Microsoft has since widened the scope of EWS removal to include all Microsoft applications — Outlook, Office, Teams, and Dynamics 365.
Source: Microsoft — Deprecation of Exchange Web Services in Exchange Online
After October 2026, organizations still using Lightning Sync will experience:
Understanding the differences between Lightning Sync and EAC is essential for planning your migration. This isn't a simple swap — the two platforms have fundamentally different architectures, capabilities, and limitations.
| Dimension | Lightning Sync | Einstein Activity Capture |
|---|---|---|
| Data Storage | Stored directly in Salesforce core database | Stored in Salesforce cloud infrastructure (AWS) outside core database |
| Data Retention | Permanent (follows standard Salesforce retention) | 24 months for standard licenses; configurable with add-ons |
| Email Capture | Contacts and events only — no email content | Automatic email capture (incoming and outgoing) with content |
| Reporting | Fully reportable in standard Salesforce reports | Activity Timeline and dashboards; native reports available with "Sync Email as Salesforce Activity" |
| Setup Complexity | Complex admin configuration with field mappings | Simplified, guided setup with Migration Assistant |
| Customization | Highly customizable field mappings | Limited customization; configuration-based approach |
| Workflow/Flow Triggers | Triggers standard Salesforce automation | No direct workflow triggers unless "Sync Email as Salesforce Activity" is enabled |
| UI Requirements | Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic | Lightning Experience only; requires Activity Timeline |
| Authentication | Basic authentication via EWS | Modern OAuth 2.0 via Microsoft Graph API |
| Licensing | Included with Sales Cloud and Service Cloud | 100 licenses included; additional licenses required beyond 100 users |
| AI Integration | None | Powers Einstein Email Insights, Opportunity Insights, Lead Scoring, and Agentforce |
| Mobile Support | Limited | Full mobile support |
| Recurring Events | Supported | Not supported (manual entry required) |
| Platform Encryption | Supported (Shield Platform Encryption) | Not supported for EAC data |
| Microsoft API | Exchange Web Services (EWS) — deprecated October 2026 | Microsoft Graph API — Microsoft's modern, supported standard |
| Future Development | None — deprecated since Winter '21 | Active development; new features every release |
Official comparison: Salesforce Help — EAC vs Lightning Sync
The migration to EAC isn't just about maintaining existing functionality — it's an upgrade. Here's what you gain:
| Aspect | EWS (Legacy) | Microsoft Graph API (Modern) |
|---|---|---|
| Authentication | Basic/NTLM authentication | OAuth 2.0 with modern consent flows |
| Security | Vulnerable (Midnight Blizzard exploit) | Hardened with conditional access policies |
| Performance | Slower, aggressive throttling | Faster, intelligent throttling |
| Feature Scope | Mail, calendar, contacts | Mail, calendar, contacts + Teams, OneDrive, SharePoint, and 50+ services |
| Mobile Support | Limited | Full cross-platform support |
| Future Support | Deprecated October 2026; fully disabled April 2027 | Microsoft's strategic investment for all cloud services |
| API Updates | Frozen since 2018 | Continuous development with new capabilities each quarter |
Key resource: Microsoft — EWS to Graph API Mappings
Salesforce and Microsoft require you to complete two distinct steps before October 2026. Missing either one will result in broken sync functionality.
Important: You cannot run EAC and Lightning Sync simultaneously for the same users. Plan your migration in phases — start with a pilot group, validate, then migrate remaining users.
Official guide: Salesforce Help — Move from Lightning Sync to Einstein Activity Capture
Official guide: Salesforce Help — Upgrade to Microsoft Graph in EAC
Note: Microsoft Graph requires your Microsoft 365 admin to approve the Salesforce app registration. Coordinate with your IT team early.
The pitfall: EAC standard licenses retain activity data for only 24 months.
The solution: Export Lightning Sync data before migration using Data Loader or Reports. Store exports in a data warehouse, or use Enhanced EAC licenses for extended retention.
The pitfall: Lightning Sync data is fully reportable; EAC data historically was not.
The solution: Enable "Sync Email as Salesforce Activity" (Summer '25+) for standard report access. Use Activity Timeline dashboards and Einstein Activity Metrics as alternatives.
The pitfall: Users need both an EAC Permission Set License AND assignment to an active configuration.
The solution: Use the Summary tab in EAC Settings to audit permission sets and configuration assignments simultaneously.
The pitfall: Graph requires OAuth 2.0 app registration in Azure AD. Without M365 admin cooperation, the upgrade stalls.
The solution: Engage your Microsoft 365 admin in Week 1. Provide Salesforce's documentation on required permissions.
The pitfall: EAC does not support recurring event synchronization.
The solution: Communicate this limitation. Recurring events must be managed exclusively in Outlook/Google Calendar or created individually in Salesforce.
The pitfall: Lightning Sync triggers Salesforce automations; EAC does not by default.
The solution: Enable "Sync Email as Salesforce Activity" or redesign automations for Activity Timeline events or Platform Events.
The pitfall: EAC does not capture internal domain emails.
The solution: Document this limitation. Evaluate third-party tools if internal email tracking is critical.
The pitfall: EAC uses Activity Timeline, not Related Lists. Users need retraining.
The solution: Update page layouts. Create training materials. Include in Week 8 communications.
| Edition/Add-On | EAC Included | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sales Cloud Starter | ✅ Standard (up to 100 users) | Basic email, calendar, and contact sync |
| Sales Cloud Professional | ✅ Standard (up to 100 users) | Basic sync with configuration options |
| Sales Cloud Enterprise | ✅ Standard (up to 100 users) | Full configuration and admin controls |
| Sales Cloud Unlimited | ✅ Included | Higher license limits |
| Einstein 1 Sales Edition | ✅ Included | Full EAC plus Einstein AI features |
| Einstein for Sales (Add-On) | ✅ Enhanced EAC | Extended retention, additional features |
| Sales Engagement (Add-On) | ✅ Included | Advanced activity tracking and sequences |
| Revenue Intelligence (Add-On) | ✅ Included | Pipeline and forecasting insights |
Important: Review how EAC data is stored, retained (24 months standard), and which AI features access it. Configure privacy settings appropriately before enabling EAC.
Lightning Sync will stop working in October 2026 when Microsoft disables Exchange Web Services (EWS) globally. Salesforce deprecated Lightning Sync in Winter '21 (late 2020) and has recommended migrating to Einstein Activity Capture since then. Salesforce recommends completing the migration by August 2026 to allow time for testing.
Go to Setup → Quick Find → "Lightning Sync" and launch the Migration Assistant. The tool walks you through transferring settings to an EAC configuration. After migration, assign users, verify sync functionality, then disable Lightning Sync. You must also upgrade from EWS to Microsoft Graph API.
Microsoft's EWS retirement directly breaks Lightning Sync. After October 2026, no Lightning Sync operations will function. Einstein Activity Capture uses Microsoft Graph API instead, making it immune to the retirement. Complete both the EAC migration and Graph API upgrade.
EAC Standard is included with Sales Cloud and Service Cloud for up to 100 users. Organizations with more than 100 users need additional licenses through add-ons like Einstein for Sales, Sales Engagement, or Revenue Intelligence.
Existing Lightning Sync data (Tasks, Events) remains in Salesforce. However, EAC stores new data with a 24-month retention window for standard licenses. Custom reports may need rebuilding. Workflow automations may not fire unless you enable "Sync Email as Salesforce Activity."
No — not for the same users. A phased approach is recommended: migrate a pilot group first, validate, then migrate remaining users. Different user groups can be on different platforms during the transition.
Key limitations: 24-month data retention, recurring events don't sync, limited customization, internal emails aren't captured, Shield Platform Encryption not supported, and Lightning Experience is required. Many gaps are narrowing with each Salesforce release.
EAC provides foundational activity data for Agentforce AI agents — including lead scoring, opportunity analysis, conversation intelligence, and autonomous monitoring. Without EAC, Agentforce has limited visibility into real customer interactions.
The Lightning Sync retirement isn't a distant concern — it's happening in approximately five months. Microsoft's EWS deprecation in October 2026 is a hard deadline with no workaround. Every Salesforce organization still running Lightning Sync needs to complete a two-step migration: (1) move to Einstein Activity Capture and (2) upgrade to Microsoft Graph API.
The good news is that this migration is also an upgrade. EAC gives you capabilities Lightning Sync never offered — automatic email logging, AI-powered insights, Agentforce integration, modern security, and a platform that's actively being developed for the future.
Start today. Test in sandbox this week. Plan your pilot for the coming weeks. Complete the full migration by August 2026. Your teams — and your data — will thank you.
Need expert help with your Lightning Sync migration? Vantage Point specializes in Salesforce platform migrations, Einstein Activity Capture configuration, and Agentforce readiness. We've helped hundreds of organizations navigate complex Salesforce transitions — from initial planning through post-migration validation.
👉 Contact Vantage Point to schedule a free migration assessment and get a customized project plan for your organization.
Vantage Point is a certified Salesforce and HubSpot partner specializing in CRM implementation, integration, and AI-powered automation. We help businesses of all sizes navigate platform changes, optimize their technology stack, and drive measurable results through strategic consulting, MuleSoft integration, Data Cloud activation, and Agentforce deployment. From Lightning Sync migrations to full digital transformation, Vantage Point turns complex technology into competitive advantage.