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Published 10 March 2025

If you’re still running SharePoint Server 2019 on-prem, there’s a hard date to plan around: extended support ends on 14 July 2026. After that, SharePoint Server 2019 will no longer receive security updates, bug fixes, or Microsoft support. That doesn’t mean your platform will suddenly shut off overnight, but it does mean you’re running critical systems without a safety net. 

What “end of support” actually means 

Microsoft’s lifecycle policy is straightforward, and these are the key dates you need to be aware of: 

  • Mainstream support ended in January 2024, which means feature updates stopped. 
  • Extended support ends on 14 July 2026, which means no more security patches or fixes. 

From that point on, if a new vulnerability is discovered, it won’t be patched for SharePoint 2019. And if something breaks, the guidance is to move to a supported version rather than expecting a fix.

What are the risks of running SharePoint Server 2019 after support ends?

1. Security exposure increases  

Once patching stops, new exploits remain open. For a platform that holds business content, records, and internal information, that’s not a position you want to be in. 

2. Compliance and audit pressure 

For regulated organisations (government, healthcare, finance), operating on unsupported software can create real issues during audits, especially where security standards or internal policies expect vendor-supported platforms. 

3. Integrations will start to break 

Microsoft 365 services keep evolving, but SharePoint 2019 will not. Over time that mismatch can show up as compatibility problems with workflows that don’t behave the same way, connectors that don’t keep pace, or user experiences that become inconsistent across tools. 

4. Costs creep up in the background 

Even if the platform is “fine”, unsupported environments tend to cost more to keep steady: 

  • more time spent on workarounds and maintenance 
  • more effort to keep supporting infrastructure healthy 
  • higher risk of unplanned outage work 

5. Business continuity risk 

When you’re relying on an ageing stack, routine changes elsewhere (browser updates, operating system updates, identity/security changes, downstream systems) can trigger unexpected downtime. 

Your options moving forward from SharePoint Server 2019

While there are a few pathways available, most organisations are choosing to move to Microsoft 365 to stay current, secure and aligned with Microsoft’s long-term direction. 

Option A: Migrate to Microsoft 365 (SharePoint Online)

This is the path many teams take when they want to modernise and reduce ongoing platform upkeep. Benefits typically include: 

  • ongoing updates and security patching handled by Microsoft 
  • tighter integration with Teams, OneDrive and the Power Platform 
  • scalability for hybrid work and distributed teams 
  • modern security and compliance capabilities across Microsoft 365  

Option B: Stay on-prem with SharePoint Server Subscription Edition (SE)

If you genuinely need on-premises, Microsoft’s on-prem successor is SharePoint Server Subscription EditionIt’s designed for continuous updates (more like an evergreen model) and keeps you in a supported state without forcing a full cloud move. 

Option C: Run a Hybrid SharePoint Environment

Some organisations choose a hybrid model, keeping specific workloads on-prem (where required) while moving collaboration and broader content into Microsoft 365. 

How Engage Squared can help 

With extended support for SharePoint Server 2019 ending on 14 July 2026, now is the time to plan your next move. Engage Squared specialises in end-to-end information management and migration, from governance design and discovery through to migration execution and change adoption. Our team of Microsoft experts will ensure your move to Microsoft 365 is secure, structured, and tailored to your organisation.

Check out our case study library to read some of our client success stories. Get in touch with us today to start your migration journey.

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