Meta is pulling the plug on Messenger desktop apps for Windows and Mac computers. The company confirmed that both applications will stop working on December 15, 2025. After that date, anyone trying to open the apps will be sent straight to the Facebook website instead.
This news might not be welcome for people who enjoy using Messenger on their computers. The standalone desktop apps have been around for years, giving users a dedicated space to chat with friends and family without opening a web browser. But Meta has decided it’s time to move on.
The company isn’t making a big announcement about this change. Instead, users are finding out through notifications inside the app itself. According to Meta’s help page, once you see that notification, you’ll have 60 days to keep using the app before it becomes completely useless. When those 60 days are up, the app won’t open anymore.
Meta is telling users to delete the app after December 15 because it won’t do anything but take up space on your computer. The app has already been removed from the Mac App Store, so new users can’t even download it anymore. This shows that Meta has been planning this change for a while.
So what are your options after December 15? If you use Windows, you can download the Facebook desktop app and use Messenger from there. Both Windows and Mac users can also just open a web browser and go to Facebook.com or Messenger.com. The web version works pretty much the same way as the app, though some people might miss having a separate application.
For people who use Messenger without having a Facebook account, there’s good news. You’ll be sent to Messenger.com instead of Facebook.com, and you can keep using it without needing to create a Facebook profile. Meta made sure that people who prefer to stay off Facebook can still use the messaging service.
Before the shutdown happens, Meta is strongly suggesting that users turn on something called secure storage and set up a PIN. This is really important because it protects your chat history during the switch. Without doing this, you might lose access to your old conversations when you move to the web version. The process is simple enough. Just go to your settings, find Privacy & Safety, then look for End-to-end encrypted chats, and finally Message storage. Make sure secure storage is turned on and create a PIN.
Once you make the switch to using Messenger on the web, all your chats should show up on any device you use. Your conversations will be saved in the cloud, so whether you’re on your phone, tablet, or computer, everything stays in one place.
This move isn’t really surprising when you look at what Meta has been doing lately. Back in September 2024, the company replaced the original Messenger app with something called a Progressive Web App. That version got a lot of complaints from users who said it was buggy and didn’t work well. Many people felt like it was rushed and not properly tested before release.
The decision to get rid of desktop apps completely is probably about simplifying things for Meta. Most people use Messenger on their phones anyway. According to the company’s data, the mobile apps and website versions cover what most users need. Keeping separate desktop apps running means more work for Meta’s developers, and if not many people are using them, it doesn’t make business sense.
Meta hasn’t explained exactly why they’re making this change, but the writing was on the wall when they introduced the Progressive Web App last year. That was likely the first step in their plan to move everyone away from standalone applications. The company seems to be focusing on making the web version better instead of maintaining multiple different apps.
For users who rely on the desktop app every day, this change will take some getting used to. Desktop apps usually have better performance, work offline, and integrate better with your computer’s operating system. Notifications tend to work more smoothly, and you can organize your workspace better when you have a dedicated application instead of just another browser tab.
The timing of this shutdown gives people a couple of months to prepare. December 15 falls right in the middle of the holiday season, which might be intentional. People tend to be busy during that time and might not notice the change as much. Or it could just be when Meta’s development schedule lined up.
This is part of a bigger pattern at Meta where the company is trying to unite all its messaging services. They’ve been working on connecting Messenger with Instagram Direct Messages and making everything work together more smoothly. Getting rid of desktop apps is probably another piece of that puzzle, pushing everyone toward the same platforms instead of having different options scattered everywhere.
Some people think this decision will push users toward other messaging apps like Telegram, Signal, or WhatsApp which Meta also owns.
The December 15 deadline is firm, so there’s no point in hoping Meta will change its mind. The best thing to do is start getting comfortable with using Messenger in your web browser now. That way, when the shutdown happens, you won’t be caught off guard or lose any important conversations.
For students and professionals who keep Messenger open while working or studying, this change means adjusting your workflow. Instead of having a dedicated app in your dock or taskbar, you’ll need to keep a browser tab open. Some people find that more distracting because browsers have lots of other tabs competing for attention. But that’s just the reality of where Meta is heading.
The future of Messenger on computers is clearly web-based. Meta wants everyone using the same interface whether they’re on Facebook.com or Messenger.com. This makes it easier for them to update features, fix problems, and show you ads. And yes, the web version definitely has more ads than the standalone app did.
Meta’s support page makes it clear that this isn’t up for discussion. The apps are ending, and users need to adapt. The company is being upfront about the timeline and giving people the tools to save their data.
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