Amazon Ends Support for Older Kindles on May 20, and a Reset Could Leave Them Unusable

April 13, 2026
Amazon Ends Support for Older Kindles on May 20, and a Reset Could Leave Them Unusable

Seattle, April 13, 2026, 08:16 (PDT)

Amazon plans to drop support for Kindle and Kindle Fire models launched in 2012 or before starting May 20, leaving those devices unable to purchase, borrow, or download fresh titles straight from the Kindle Store. Deregister or factory-reset one of these older devices after that, and you won’t be able to log in again.

Owners face a tighter squeeze thanks to the details: these devices won’t keep access to downloaded books unless users remain logged in and don’t perform a reset. To nudge upgrades, Amazon is dangling a 20% discount on new Kindles, plus an ebook credit—the amount depends on the market. The incentives are available through June 20.

Any books stored on those older devices will remain accessible, and libraries are still available through newer Kindles, the Kindle app, or Kindle for Web. Owners of pre-2013 Kindle Fire tablets won’t lose access to other apps or Amazon services—just ebooks.

The lineup stretches all the way back to the 2007 debut Kindle—covering Kindle 2, DX, DX Graphite, Keyboard, Touch, Kindle 4, Kindle 5, and the first Paperwhite. Also on the list: the initial two Kindle Fire tablets, plus both the 2012 Fire HD 7 and Fire HD 8.9 models.

Jesse Carr, spokesperson for Amazon, said the company has offered support for these models for no less than 14 years, with some devices reaching 18 years. Carr told TechCrunch that Amazon is alerting current users and rolling out promotions to help them move on.

Tech analyst Paolo Pescatore described the move as “understandable from a security and support perspective.” He pointed out the hardware was “built for a different era,” and isn’t really up to the task when it comes to handling modern software that needs more bandwidth and processing muscle. The Guardian

Critics aren’t having it. Ugo Vallauri from the Restart Project called out the risk of “soft-bricking” — that’s software making devices mostly useless, not actual hardware breakdown. He pointed to estimates indicating up to 2 million e-readers could be hit, which could mean over 624 tons of e-waste. The Guardian

What’s not clear yet: just how much leeway owners will have after the cutoff takes effect. According to WIRED, users might still get documents onto impacted Kindles via USB. But there’s uncertainty around whether third-party services like Libby—the library app that sends books to Kindle—will continue to function on these older devices.

Back in 2016, Amazon tipped its hand—some longtime Kindle users got word they’d need software updates just to hang onto store access. Now, with the May 20 cutoff, that maintenance hassle becomes non-negotiable for the earliest Kindle models.

Amazon slipped roughly 0.4% early Monday in U.S. trading.

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