The Elastic Public Roadmap is here
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There is a specific kind of pain that every developer knows: You spend weeks building something custom and testing it until it’s ready for production. Then finally deploy it, when suddenly… you read the release notes for Elastic’s latest release and realize that we just built it natively.
Nobody likes reinventing the wheel, especially when a better version is right around the corner. You didn’t need to write that code; you just needed to know that we were writing it.
We want to help you avoid that wasted effort.
Today, I am excited to announce the launch of the Elastic Public Roadmap on GitHub.
Publishing our public roadmap is a reflection of our open source roots and aligns with our commitment to putting our customers first.
We believe that getting our plans out in the open will help drive shared focus. It will ensure that our internal teams are better enabled to stay in sync and help our customers and community plan their own projects and programs better.
What’s on the Elastic Public Roadmap?
The roadmap will capture and share information regarding planned launches, increasing visibility into upcoming features, capabilities, and enhancements.
How far into the future will you be able to see?
The Elastic Public Roadmap will look ahead across near- and mid-term priorities.
If you click through to GitHub (today), you’ll notice how much time we’re dedicating to improving everything from Streams to Elastic Agent Builder to Elastic Workflows and more.

When you click on any of the cards in the roadmap, it will open a new dialog box explaining what the feature is, who it is for, and what we believe the value proposition is to our customers and community.

In addition, we’ve also made it easy to navigate by solution. So, for example, if you are interested in only Elastic Security, you can click one of the tabs at the top of the roadmap to sort by only those features, capabilities, and enhancements that apply.

Finally, what would the Elastic Public Roadmap be without, you know … search? With the included search functionality, it’s easy to find out, for example, what features were released with Elastic 9.3 (“v9.3.0”), or — perhaps of more import — what features are (status) “In Process.”

You now have the map. It’s time to explore.
This is an exciting day for everyone who’s working with Elastic’s products and solutions.
I invite you to visit the Elastic Public Roadmap on GitHub today.
And don’t forget to come back often — we will be making updates on a regular basis.
The release and timing of any features or functionality described in this post remain at Elastic's sole discretion. Any features or functionality not currently available may not be delivered on time or at all.