Message deferral
When a queue or subscription client receives a message that it's willing to process, but the processing isn't currently possible because of special circumstances, it has the option of "deferring" retrieval of the message to a later point. The message remains in the queue or subscription, but it's set aside.
Note
Deferred messages aren't expired and automatically moved to a dead-letter queue until a client app attempts to receive them using an API and the sequence number. This behavior is by design. When a client tries to retrieve a deferred message, it's checked for expired condition and moved to a dead-letter queue if it's already expired. An expired message is moved to a deadletter subqueue only when the dead-letter feature is enabled for the entity (queue or subscription).
Sample scenarios
Deferral is a feature created specifically for workflow processing scenarios. Workflow frameworks might require certain operations to be processed in a particular order. They might have to postpone processing of some received messages until prescribed prior work that's informed by other messages has been completed.
A simple illustrative example is an order processing sequence in which a payment notification from an external payment provider appears in a system before the matching purchase order has been propagated from the store front to the fulfillment system. In that case, the fulfillment system might defer processing the payment notification until there's an order with which to associate it. In rendezvous scenarios, where messages from different sources drive a workflow forward, the real-time execution order might indeed be correct, but the messages reflecting the outcomes might arrive out of order.
Ultimately, deferral aids in reordering messages from the arrival order into an order in which they can be processed, while leaving those messages safely in the message store for which processing needs to be postponed.
If a message can't be processed because a particular resource for handling that message is temporarily unavailable but message processing shouldn't be summarily suspended, a way to put that message on the side for a few minutes is to remember the sequence number in a scheduled message to be posted in a few minutes, and re-retrieve the deferred message when the scheduled message arrives. If a message handler depends on a database for all operations and that database is temporarily unavailable, it shouldn't use deferral, but rather suspend receiving messages altogether until the database is available again.
Retrieving deferred messages
Deferred messages remain in the main queue along with all other active messages (unlike dead-letter messages that live in a subqueue), but they can no longer be received using the regular receive operations. Deferred messages can be discovered via message browsing or peeking if an application loses track of them.
To retrieve a deferred message, its owner is responsible for remembering the sequence number as it defers it. Any receiver that knows the sequence number of a deferred message can later receive the message by using receive methods that take the sequence number as a parameter. For more information about sequence numbers, see Message sequencing and timestamps.
Next steps
Try the samples in the language of your choice to explore Azure Service Bus features.
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for .NET (latest) - See the Settling Messages sample.
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for Java (latest)
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for Python - see the receive_deferred_message_queue.py sample.
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for JavaScript - see the advanced/deferral.js sample.
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for TypeScript - see the advanced/deferral.ts sample.
See samples for the older .NET and Java client libraries here:
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for .NET (legacy) - See the Deferral sample.
- Azure Service Bus client library samples for Java (legacy)
On 30 September 2026, we'll retire the Azure Service Bus SDK libraries WindowsAzure.ServiceBus, Microsoft.Azure.ServiceBus, and com.microsoft.azure.servicebus, which don't conform to Azure SDK guidelines. We'll also end support of the SBMP protocol, so you'll no longer be able to use this protocol after 30 September 2026. Migrate to the latest Azure SDK libraries, which offer critical security updates and improved capabilities, before that date.
Although the older libraries can still be used beyond 30 September 2026, they'll no longer receive official support and updates from Microsoft. For more information, see the support retirement announcement.