Skype is shutting down FOREVER after 22 years as Microsoft reveals why it’s being killed

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MICROSOFT has vowed to kill off Skype forever, ending a 22-year run for the legendary chat app.

Skype was a massive hit in the noughties – but eventually faced stiff competition from rivals like Zoom and Google Meet.

Skype chat window showing a conversation between two users, including shared photos and files.
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Skype's legendary text, audio and video chatting app will soon be no more

Now the app is set to be killed off in May, and Microsoft is already warning users to start moving away.

Microsoft has decided that it isn't worth the time to maintain Skype when it has other options available.

So instead, Microsoft will end support for Skype and focus on its own Teams app instead.

"Starting in May, Skype will no longer be available," a Microsoft notice explains.

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It urges users to "continue your calls and chats in Teams".

WHEN IS SKYPE SHUTTING DOWN?

The official end date for Skype is May 5, 2025, after just shy of 22 years of service.

The app will stop working, but your Skype account won't be closed immediately.

Instead you'll be able to sign into Microsoft Teams using your Skype account.

You'll be able to do that within the next few days.

Once you're into Microsoft Teams, you should still be able to see your old contacts and chats from Skype.

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Alternatively, you can save your old contacts and chats by exporting them from Skype ahead of time.

GOING OFFLINE

The death of Skype shouldn't come as a major surprise.

Skype's own blog – which reveals updates to the app – stopped posting in May 2024.

At the time, Skype hailed a "new version of Skype messaging" that offered a "complete revamp that promises to redefine your messaging experience".

Skype screen showing options to share desktop or window during a video call.
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The app has been upgraded over the years – but is no longer worth the investmentCredit: Microsoft / Skype

But the blog stopped being updated right after, and Microsoft appeared to have no public future plans for it.

Skype was a popular way for users to send messages, do audio or video calls, and even dial real numbers.

However, Skype faced stiff competition from Zoom and Google Meet – as well as apps like Apple's FaceTime, and Meta's Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp.

Skype was created by Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis, along with a team of four Estonian developers, in the early noughties.

SKYPE – WHERE DID IT GET ITS NAME?

Have you ever wondered what Skype actually means?

Skype is now a household name, but most people never question how the app got its name.

It turns out that Skype is a shortening of the term "Sky peer-to-peer".

That's because Skype was an early pioneer of peer-to-peer calling, which meant that users would correct directly to each other – rather than via a server.

This was then shortened to the name Skyper.

Sadly some of the domain names for Skyper had already been snapped up.

So the app's creators decided to ditch the final "r" in the name – leaving us with Skype.

Picture Credit: Microsoft / Skype

It was released in August 2003, and then acquired for $2.6 billion by eBay in September 2005.

A huge chunk of Skype (worth $1.9 billion at the time) was bought up by investors in September 2009 – giving them 65% ownership of the company.

It was only in May 2011 that Skype was snapped up by Microsoft for a whopping $8.5 billion.

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This was Microsoft's way of replacing its own Windows Live Messenger service, which had previously been known as MSN Messenger.

Screenshot
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Skype's logo changed several times. The first ran from 2006 to 2012, with the second staying until 2019, before being replaced with its final iconCredit: Microsoft / Skype / Wikimedia Commons

Skype was best-known for its desktop app, but it was available on loads of gadgets, including Mac computers, iPhone and Android devices, Microsoft's Xbox consoles, and even Apple and Google smartwatches.