For years, the idea of switching a large enterprise’s entire productivity stack from one platform to another was enough to give any IT administrator a mild panic attack. You are talking about thousands of emails, years of calendar data, contact lists stretching back a decade, and the looming threat of something going wrong in the middle of it all. Most companies that wanted to move to Google Workspace had two options: endure a painful, slow, manual migration process or shell out serious money for a third-party migration tool that promised to make the whole thing less miserable. Google just changed both of those equations at once.
On April 22, 2026, Google officially announced the general availability of its new enterprise-grade data migration tool called “Data import,” now live inside the Google Workspace Admin console. The pitch is straightforward – easier, faster, and more accurate migrations for enterprise organizations, covering emails, calendars, and contacts, with zero additional tool cost attached. For IT teams, this is not a small deal. Third-party migration tools have historically been a significant line item in any enterprise migration budget, and removing that friction entirely could be a genuine accelerant for companies sitting on the fence about switching platforms.
So what exactly makes this different from what was available before? The old Google Data Migration Service had real limitations – it worked well enough for smaller environments or straightforward setups, but complex enterprise scenarios with thousands of users, large mailboxes, and tight timelines were a different story entirely. Migration speeds could drag, data fidelity was sometimes inconsistent, and the whole process required careful manual babysitting. The new Data import tool tackles those pain points directly by using parallelization and improved algorithms to finish migrations faster and more accurately. In plain terms, instead of moving data in one slow sequential line, the tool works across multiple streams simultaneously – similar to how downloading multiple files at once is faster than waiting for them one at a time.
The tool ships with three core capabilities that IT admins will immediately appreciate. First, it is a cloud-native, turnkey solution accessible directly from the Admin console – no separate software to install, no additional infrastructure to spin up. Second, the faster speeds and improved accuracy mean less time babysitting a migration in progress and fewer errors to clean up on the other side. Third, and most importantly for enterprise budget conversations, there are no additional Google Cloud Platform costs during migration and no third-party licensing fees required. That last point alone could make a meaningful difference for companies that have been delaying a migration purely because of the cost and complexity overhead.
Google also bundled in something that addresses an often-overlooked part of the migration problem – planning. Alongside the data import tool, there is a new migration planning utility that helps IT teams forecast timelines and organize user data into speed-optimized batches before a single byte of data gets moved. This kind of upfront planning capability is exactly what large enterprise migrations need, because the actual data transfer is often the simpler part. The harder part is change management – figuring out who gets migrated when, estimating how long it will all take, and communicating that accurately to stakeholders across the business. The planning utility, available as an open-source tool on GitHub, tackles that directly by giving teams data-driven estimates rather than educated guesses.
Right now, the tool’s first major target is Microsoft Exchange Online, which makes complete sense given that Microsoft 365 remains the dominant enterprise productivity suite and the most common platform companies are migrating away from when they choose Workspace. Google has also confirmed that support for OneDrive, SharePoint Online, and Microsoft Teams is coming soon, which would dramatically expand the tool’s usefulness for organizations with files and collaboration data spread across Microsoft’s ecosystem. That future support matters because email-only migration is rarely the full picture for any large enterprise – documents, shared drives, and team collaboration spaces all need to come along too.
Availability is broad from day one. The new Data import tool is accessible across Business Starter, Standard, and Plus plans, as well as Enterprise Standard and Plus, Education tiers, and nonprofit editions. It rolls out through both Rapid Release and Scheduled Release domains, meaning most admins should be able to access it right now from the Admin console. The only requirement to run a migration is having super admin access to the Workspace account – a sensible security guard given the sensitivity of the data being moved.
Google’s timing here is also worth noting. The enterprise productivity software market has become increasingly competitive, with Microsoft and Google trading punches over enterprise customers for years. A frictionless, free migration path removes one of the biggest practical barriers for companies that are considering making the switch to Workspace – the sheer operational pain and financial cost of actually getting there. By folding a capable migration tool directly into the product with no surcharge, Google is essentially telling enterprise IT teams that the cost of switching just got a lot lower. Whether that message lands depends on how well the tool actually performs at scale, but as a strategic move, it is a smart one.
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