End of an era: Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) is officially retired. What should IT admins use instead in 2026? Our new article explains the best replacements for different environments.
Many IT admins who have been in IT for years, including me, relied on tools like Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) for efficient OS deployments in various environments. MDT has been a good tool for creating and managing Windows images, automating installations, and handling driver injections. However, with Microsoft’s recent announcement, it’s time to look ahead. On January 6, 2026, Microsoft declared the immediate retirement of MDT, meaning no more updates, security fixes, or even official support.
This retirement isn’t entirely surprising. MDT’s lifecycle was tied to underpinning technologies like Windows PE and WDS, which are evolving or being deprioritized. Support effectively ends after the first Configuration Manager release post-October 2025, and downloads have already been pulled from official channels
How the IT will be affected?
- Existing deployments will continue to function, but they are no longer supported.
- Download packages have been removed from official distribution channels, including the Microsoft Learn and Intune pages.
While MDT was a foundational tool for decades, its discontinuation reflects Microsoft’s shift toward cloud-first deployment strategies. Organizations using MDT should now prioritize migration to avoid long-term risks.
Microsoft’s Recommended Alternatives
- Windows Autopilot for cloud-based, zero-touch deployment.
- Configuration Manager (SCCM) Operating System Deployment (OSD) for on-premises environments.
Autopilot leverages Azure AD (now Entra ID) and Intune for device provisioning. It’s ideal for modern management without heavy imaging.
Technical Setup: Devices are pre-registered via hardware hashes uploaded to Intune. On first boot, they connect to the internet, authenticate, and pull configurations.
Capabilities: Supports OOBE customization, app deployment via Win32/MSI, driver updates from Windows Update, and policy enforcement (e.g., BitLocker, Defender). Use ESP (Enrollment Status Page) for progress tracking.
Pros for MDT Users: Zero-touch reduces manual intervention; integrates with Autopilot Reset for re-provisioning. Handles hybrid joins for on-prem AD.
Cons: Requires internet connectivity; less flexible for custom WIM images or offline scenarios. Not suited for bare-metal without OEM preloads.
Migration Tip: Export MDT drivers to Intune repositories; script custom tasks via Proactive Remediations.
Worth to note that for larger environments with 500+ devices, Autopilot scales better than MDT’s share-based model.
Configuration Manager OSD
If you have an existing ConfigMgr site, OSD is the direct evolution of MDT integration.
Technical Setup: Uses task sequences similar to MDT but with deeper SCCM features like software distribution points and boundary groups.
Capabilities: PXE booting via WDS/SCCM, dynamic driver packages, application models for conditional installs, and USMT for user state migration. Supports multicast for large-scale deployments.
Pros: Full on-prem control; integrates with SQL for reporting; handles complex branching logic in sequences.
Cons: Steeper learning curve and resource-intensive (requires dedicated servers). Licensing via Microsoft Endpoint Manager.
Migration Tip: Import MDT task sequences into SCCM, then refactor for native steps. Remove MDT add-ons to comply with retirement.
Third-Party Alternatives: SmartDeploy and WAPT
It’s often cost effective to seek elsewhere than Microsoft. (Not liking having my eggs in the same basket, right?)
Beyond Microsoft’s ecosystem, tools like SmartDeploy and WAPT offer flexible, cost-effective options for OS deployment.
SmartDeploy is a commercial tool positioned as a direct MDT replacement, focusing on hardware-independent imaging.
Technical Setup: Central console for building golden images on VMs, then deploying via USB, network, or cloud.
Capabilities: Platform Packs for drivers (over 1,000 models supported); WDS/PXE integration; answer files for unattended installs. Supports multilayer imaging to separate OS, apps, and drivers.
Pros: Reduces image count (one WIM per OS version); offline deployment; built-in migration from MDT without rebuilding everything.
Cons: Paid licensing; less cloud-native than Autopilot.
Migration Tip: Import MDT shares directly; use wizard to map drivers and scripts.
It’s great for SMBs needing MDT-like simplicity without ConfigMgr overhead.
WAPT: A Quick Introduction and Capabilities
WAPT (Windows APT) is an open-source package management and deployment tool inspired by Debian’s APT system, adapted for Windows environments. It’s designed for centralized software installation, updates, and configuration management across networks. While not a pure OS imaging tool like MDT, it excels in post-OS deployment tasks and can integrate with imaging workflows, making it a complementary alternative for app-heavy environments.
Quick Intro: Developed by Tranquil IT, WAPT uses a client-server architecture. WAPT enables centralized deployment of software, configurations, patches, and operating systems across Windows, Linux, and macOS environments. Tranquil IT also contributes to open-source projects such as OpenRSAT and AzureADConnect_Samba4.

The server hosts repositories of packages (MSI, EXE, scripts), while agents on endpoints pull and execute them. The documentation is really great, with many screenshots. I’d highly recommend to do a POC before adopting, but with their documentation help it is a snap!

It’s free for basic use, with enterprise editions for advanced features. Installation involves running waptserversetup.exe on a Windows server (or Linux for better scalability), configuring Nginx as the web server, and setting up PostgreSQL for the database.
Key Capabilities:
- Package Creation and Deployment: Build custom packages using WAPT’s console or PyScripter. Supports dependencies, pre/post-install scripts, and silent installs. Deploy via policies targeting OUs, groups, or hardware profiles.
- Repository Management: Mirror external repos (e.g., Chocolatey) or create internal ones. Handles versioning, rollbacks, and audits.
- Agent Management: Agents report inventory (hardware, software, configs) back to the server. Supports wake-on-LAN, remote execution, and self-service portals for users.
- Security and Compliance: Enforces signatures on packages; integrates with AD for authentication (Kerberos on Linux servers). Monitors vulnerabilities and automates patches.
- Scalability Limits: On Windows servers, handles up to 500 agents efficiently; switch to Linux for larger deployments or features like large file uploads.
- OS Deployment Integration: While WAPT focuses on software, it can script OS prep tasks (e.g., partitioning, driver installs) and deploy apps during imaging via hooks in tools like WinPE or combined with WDS.
WAPT is great in environments needing granular app control without full imaging. For pure OS deploys, you can pair it with Autopilot or OSDCloud. Limitations include no native Kerberos on Windows servers and potential performance hits for very large packages.

Choosing the Right Tool for Your Environment
Selecting an MDT replacement depends on your infrastructure:
- Cloud-First: Go with Autopilot for simplicity.
- On-Prem Heavy: ConfigMgr OSD or SmartDeploy for robust task sequences.
- Budget-Conscious/Open-Source: WAPT for app deployment, possibly extended to OS via scripts.
- Hybrid: Combine Autopilot with WAPT for end-to-end management.
Test in a lab: Start with exporting MDT assets (images, drivers) and importing into the new tool. Monitor for hardware compatibility using tools like HWInfo or PowerShell’s Get-WmiObject.

Link: WAPT and TranquilIT
Final Words
MDT’s end marks a shift to more automated, secure deployments. While it’s bittersweet, these alternatives offer better integration with modern Windows features. WAPT enables companies and public authorities to simply and securely deploy software, configurations, software and OS patches, and operating systems on Windows, Linux and macOS environments.
Perhaps one of our future blog posts, I’ll go a bit into details about how to setup a WAPT environment so you can deploy packages with this nice Open-Source tool. For enterprise environment and using the advanced functions, you should definitely get a license that allows you to manage enterprise environments with reporting, OS deployments, Software inventories etc.
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