
With the 2026 release, Sage 100 becomes a 64-bit-only application. This means that it will no longer install or run on 32-bit Windows systems. Sage has claimed this move is being done to improve security and performance while retiring older 32-bit architecture and its memory limitations.
For CFOs and controllers, the critical questions are practical: When should we upgrade? What will it cost? Who will confirm that invoicing, payroll, reporting, and customer communications work correctly after go-live?
While some businesses will experience a routine upgrade, companies running older workstations, legacy third-party add-ons, or heavily customized reports may face a more complex project. This transition may require more deliberate planning, more extensive testing, and a larger budget than a standard annual update. Before locking in your timeline, finance leaders should also understand the broader Sage 100 2026 feature changes that may affect reporting, security, document delivery, and daily workflows. Then use these six checkpoints to scope the effort and reduce the risk of disruption.
1. Confirm Sage 100 2026 64-Bit Readiness and Infrastructure Needs
Start by verifying your current Sage 100 environment with your IT lead or Sage partner. What version of Sage 100 are you running today, and is it a 32-bit or 64-bit deployment?
Because Sage 100 2026 is exclusively 64-bit, and 32-bit and 64-bit versions cannot run side by side on the same machine, your current version dictates your upgrade path. Although Sage’s standard support window covers the current release plus the two prior versions, multi-version upgrade paths may still be available, including upgrades from Sage 100 2023 directly to Sage 100 2026. If you are on an older, unsupported version, your project may require an interim upgrade or a multi-step migration.
Review the Windows environment you are using for your ERP early as well. Sage will no longer verify Windows 10 compatibility starting with this release, following Microsoft’s end of support for Windows 10 on October 14, 2025. If your team still has Windows 10 workstations, treat a Windows 11 or supported server OS upgrade as a required line item in the project budget, not an optional one.
2. Inventory Sage 100 Integrations and Add-Ons Before You Pick a Date
Many Sage 100 customers rely on integrated third-party tools for functions such as payroll, CRM, e-commerce, EDI, warehouse management, shipping, payments, sales tax, reporting, and business alerts.
To work with Sage 100 2026, these integrations must be compatible with 64-bit architecture. In many cases this does not require a total software overhaul. Several vendors offer supported 64-bit configurations, patches, or updated connectors.
Before upgrading, build a complete inventory of every system connected to Sage 100. For each item, document the vendor, current version, compatibility status, update cost, and testing owner. If an integration fails after go-live, the operational impact can be immediate: delayed invoices, order fulfillment issues, payroll interruptions, or manual close workarounds.
3. Test Reports, Dashboards, and Crystal Forms
Reporting is typically where finance teams notice upgrade issues first. A transaction may post correctly to the ledger, but a custom Crystal report, Excel connection, ODBC query, Power BI feed, invoice form, check form, or financial report may still need attention after the move to 64-bit. Sage 100 2026 also updates the bundled Crystal Reports designer, so custom forms and reports should be tested even when 64-bit compatibility is not the only concern.
Controllers do not need to test every report personally. What helps most is giving the project team a critical-path list of reports required to complete the monthly close, such as financial statements, inventory valuation, margin analysis, bank reconciliation, commissions, aged receivables, and audit reports. Compare test results directly against the prior environment before signing off. A report that fails during close or audit preparation can mean overtime and manual reconciliation at exactly the wrong time.
4. Review Visual Integrator Jobs, Custom Processes, and User Controls
Upgrades often reveal legacy workflows that have not been reviewed in years. This includes Visual Integrator imports and exports, scripts, modified forms, scheduled data transfers, and automated spreadsheet uploads.
Ask for an inventory of each active job. What data does it move? When does it run? Who owns it? What breaks if it fails? If a workaround is no longer needed because of native features in the newer Sage version, use this upgrade to retire it.
Also review data fields and naming conventions. Sage 100 2026 expands the lot and serial number field from 15 to 50 characters and expands the Customer Price Level field from 1 to 15 characters. For teams managing traceability or complex pricing, those changes may be useful. Before go-live, decide whether to adopt the related conversion utilities and define how naming conventions should be handled.
The 2026 release also introduces enhanced role and user audit tracking, including new Role Audit and User Audit reports. Use this implementation window to clean up internal controls, remove inactive users, and eliminate shared logins.
5. Test Paperless Office and Document Delivery
If your business relies on Paperless Office to email invoices, customer statements, vendor remittances, or stored documents, these workflows should be tested before the system is returned to production use. A form that generates correctly on screen is only part of the test. You also need to verify the full document delivery process:
- Are PDFs generating correctly in the new 64-bit environment?
- Are delivery emails reaching customers and vendors as expected?
- Are naming conventions and automated storage locations intact?
Sage 100 2026 also introduces Paperless Office enhancements, such as a single consolidated email for each customer or vendor. Rolling out this feature as part of the upgrade can reduce email clutter and save administrative time.
6. Align the Upgrade Date with the Business Calendar
The ideal go-live date is rarely the first available weekend on the IT calendar. It should be guided by the timing of your finance and operational cycles.
Avoid scheduling your upgrade immediately before month-end close, year-end processing, physical inventory counts, peak shipping seasons, or major payroll runs. Before approving the date, make sure your project team answers four questions:
- How long is the expected technical downtime window?
- Who is responsible for validating each core process before the system is returned to production use?
- What is the rollback plan if a critical process fails?
- Who will support users during the first week after go-live?
Whenever possible, budget time for a full test-environment run, sometimes called a sandbox migration, as Sage recommends. Finding a data issue in a test environment is far less costly than dealing with a halted shipping process or an interrupted invoicing cycle in production.
Plan Your Sage 100 2026 Upgrade with SWK Technologies
The move to a 64-bit platform improves security and stability, but it requires an intentional approach from leadership. By scoping infrastructure changes early, mapping out integrations, and assigning clear ownership of testing, finance leaders can turn a technical requirement into a smoother, more valuable transition.
SWK Technologies helps Sage 100 customers plan, test, and execute upgrades with minimal operational disruption. Contact SWK today to schedule your Sage 100 2026 upgrade readiness review.
