
Meta said in a help page that it is closing its standalone Messenger website. The website will be unavailable beginning in April 2026. Users can still send and receive messages online while logged into Facebook if they so choose. This action completes Meta’s plan to reintegrate its messaging services into the primary Facebook network. This means that, officially, the website will shut down on April 14, 2026.
After this date, you will be automatically sent to facebook.com/messages when you visit messenger.com.
This comes after Messenger’s stand-alone desktop applications for Mac and Windows were recently discontinued in late 2025.
The support page states, “You will be automatically redirected to use Facebook.com/messages for messaging on a computer after messenger.com goes away.” “You can carry on talking there or through the Messenger app on your phone.”
Users can only carry on your conversations on the Messenger mobile app if you don’t have a Facebook account. The PIN that users entered when they initially generated a backup on Messenger can be used to recover their conversation history on any platform. Its also says that users can reset your PIN if you can’t remember it.
To guarantee that your encrypted chat history can be recovered on different platforms, Meta advises creating a PIN under the “Secure Storage” section of your Messenger settings.
The action was taken a few months after Meta discontinued Messenger’s stand-alone desktop applications for Mac and Windows. Since Meta had been sending current desktop app users to the Facebook website rather than the Messenger website in order to continue using the messaging service, it’s possible that the writing was already on the wall at the time.
Alessandro Paluzzi, a reverse engineer, was the first to notice the alteration. On the Messenger website and app, Meta is informing users of the upgrade through a pop-up message.
Many of its users on reddits, particularly those who have cancelled their Facebook accounts, have expressed their dissatisfaction with the upgrade on social media, stating that they no longer want to send and receive Messenger chats online via the Facebook website.
Although customers are irritated by Meta’s decision to shut down several Messenger services, the internet giant is able to cut expenses by having fewer platforms to manage.
In 2008, Messenger made its debut as “Facebook Chat.” In 2011, Facebook (now Meta) released Facebook Messenger as a stand-alone application. In order to drive users to the Messenger app, the social network withdrew messaging features from its main mobile app in 2014. Over time, the tech giant positioned Messenger as its own service outside of Facebook. In 2023, the firm started integrating Messenger back within the Facebook app, reversing previous decision.
TechCrunch claims that this is a component of a larger “platform reset” aimed at optimising operations, cutting maintenance expenses, and concentrating resources on mobile-first experiences and AI-powered messaging.
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