If youāre using an older Kindle, you may want to check what year it was released. Amazon has sent out emails to some of its users, with a warning that itās discontinuing support for Kindle ereaders and Fire tables released in 2012 or earlier. You can still read books youāve already downloaded on those devices, but youāll no longer be able to purchase, borrow or download new ones, starting on May 20, 2026. In addition, if the device has an issue that can only be solved by a factory reset, doing so will brick it. Deregestering it will also render it unusable. On Kindle Fire devices, users wonāt be able to purchase or download content anymore, but other services would remain functional.
The affected models include the very first Kindle, Kindle 2, Kindle DX, Kindle Keyboard, Kindle 4, Kindle Touch, Kindle 5 and the first version of Kindle Paperwhite. Weāve asked Amazon why it decided to cut off support for those models, and the company told us: āThese models have been supported for at least 14 years ā some as long as 18 years ā but technology has come a long way in that timeā¦ā
Amazon also told Engadget that this only affects approximately 3 percent of its current users, whom itās now urging to upgrade. In its email, it gives them a promo code for 20 percent off select Kindle devices, as well as ebook credits if they purchase a new model by June 20. āOur newer Kindle devices bring meaningful improvements in screen quality, performance and accessibility ā and you’ll have access to your complete Kindle library and the Kindle Store,ā the company wrote.
Update 04/08/26 8:23AM ET: Added information we received from Amazon.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/amazon-is-cutting-off-support-for-older-kindles-115653205.html?src=rss