After more than 20 years working with Dynamics GP (from finance roles to consulting and support) I’ve learned just about every way the system works… and every way it breaks.
So when I started working with Business Central and helping clients move from GP, I had the same question many of you probably have:
Is this going to feel completely different—or just familiar with a new name?
The answer is both.
From an accounting standpoint, nothing really changes. Both systems follow the same principles and ultimately get you to the same place. But when it comes to inventory setup, structure, and day‑to‑day workflows, Business Central introduces some important differences—some subtle, some significant.
Those of us that work in distribution, inventory management, or manufacturing, we know inventory can be a nightmare. But what BC does is it takes every nightmare and turns it into a quiet dream.
Let’s walk through the ones I find most interesting and most impactful for teams coming from GP.
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Inventory Setup: From Multiple Windows to One Place
One of the first things I noticed moving from GP to Business Central is how different the setup experience feels.
In GP, inventory setup is spread across multiple windows:
- Inventory control setup
- Item classes
- Posting accounts
- Additional configuration screens
You’re constantly moving between windows to complete setup.
In Business Central, most of what you need is centralized in one place.
It doesn’t mean there’s less configuration, but it’s organized more intuitively, which makes it easier to understand relationships between settings without jumping around.
Posting & Controls: More Built‑In Safeguards
GP gives you flexibility in how you manage inventory transactions, especially with overrides and document types.
Business Central approaches this a little differently by embedding more built-in controls.
For example:
- You can toggle “prevent negative inventory” directly in setup
- Cost adjustments and inventory rules are easier to standardize
Instead of relying on user overrides, Business Central encourages more consistent system‑driven controls.
Item Classes vs. Posting Groups: Same Idea, Different Structure
If you’re used to GP, you’re already comfortable with item classes: how they define accounts and structure behavior.
In Business Central, that same concept is handled through:
- Inventory posting groups
- Location-based posting setup
The idea is the same:
- Assign accounts
- Control how transactions hit the GL
But Business Central gives you more flexibility, especially when you start layering in location‑based posting or different inventory types.
Locations: More Flexibility, with a Mental Shift
Locations work differently in Business Central, and this is one area where you’ll need to shift your thinking.
In GP:
- Every item is tied to a site
- You must assign inventory to a location
In Business Central:
- You can have specified locations or unspecified ones
- Posting setup determines how inventory behaves
This flexibility can be powerful, but it also means you need to understand how posting setup, locations, and inventory flows interact more carefully.
Editing Data: Excel Changes Everything
This is one of my favorite differences.
In GP, if you want to make bulk updates (like item descriptions, units of measure, or cost changes) you usually have to:
- Update records one by one
- Or go through workarounds with integrations or SQL
In Business Central:
- You can open lists in Excel
- Or even edit in Excel and push changes back into the system
For teams managing large item catalogs, this is a huge efficiency gain.
Units of Measure: More Flexible at the Item Level
Units of measure are something I work with often and they behave differently between the two systems.
In GP:
- Units of measure are tied to a schedule
- That schedule applies consistently across items
In Business Central:
- Units of measure are configured at the item level
- You can define equivalencies more flexibly based on how items are actually used
It took me a little time to get used to this, but once I did, I found it much more intuitive—especially for organizations with complex inventory structures.
Variants: A Built‑In Advantage in Business Central
This is one area where Business Central clearly expands capability.
In BC, you can define item variants out of the box:
- Same base item
- Different attributes (color, material, etc.)
In GP, achieving this often requires:
- Manufacturing configuration
- Or custom setups
In Business Central, it’s simply part of how inventory works.
Bins: More Control at the Location Level
Bins are another area where the systems take different approaches.
In GP:
- Once you enable bins, they become part of how everything operates
- You must assign bins consistently across transactions
In Business Central:
- You can decide when bins are required
- You can make them mandatory per location
- Or use simpler tracking when appropriate
This flexibility makes it easier to tailor the system to how your warehouses actually function.
Inventory Visibility & Reporting
This is where Business Central really stands out.
In GP:
- You rely heavily on SmartLists, reports, and navigation windows
- To get different views, you usually run separate reports
In Business Central:
- You can view inventory by location, transaction, or availability in real time
- You can analyze data directly within the system
Even more powerful is analysis mode, which allows you to build pivot‑style views without leaving the platform.
For teams who spend time building reports in Excel, this is a meaningful improvement.
Final Thoughts: Familiar but More Flexible
After working in both systems, here’s how I summarize the difference:
- GP is structured and dependable
- Business Central is flexible and connected
The core accounting logic doesn’t change. Inventory still behaves the way you expect it to from a financial standpoint. But Business Central gives you:
- More visibility
- More control
- More ways to work efficiently
And once you get comfortable with it, those differences start to feel like advantages—not obstacles.
If you’re thinking about moving from GP to Business Central, my biggest advice is this:
Don’t assume everything has to be recreated the same way.
Take the opportunity to simplify, rethink, and optimize how your inventory processes actually work.
