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Meta forces users back to Facebook

Meta is pulling the plug on messenger.com and forcing desktop users back to the classic Facebook platform from April 2026. While mobile apps remain unchanged, the ad-free chat environment on PCs will no longer be available in the future.

Coming to an end for messenger.com in April 2026

Meta has spelled the end for its news service’s dedicated website. From April 2026, the domain messenger.com will no longer be accessible as an independent contact point. If you want to continue using the service in your browser, you will be automatically redirected to the integrated messaging function on the Facebook main page. The procedure follows the discontinuation of desktop applications for Windows and MacOS, which was carried out last October. For users this means: Access to chats on the PC will in future be inextricably linked to the classic Facebook platform.

The change primarily affects the way we work on the desktop. While the mobile apps for Android and iOS remain unchanged, the ability to write messages on the computer in an isolated environment without the news feed, advertisements and other distractions is eliminated. Meta officially justifies this step with a simplification of the platforms, but market observers also see this as a cost reduction by eliminating maintenance work for separate web instances.

The goal is a tighter structure across the entire meta-ecosystem. As Meta confirms on a Facebook help page (via TechCrunch), the shutdown will take place in April. After the deadline, visitors to the domain will be redirected directly to the Facebook interface. Existing conversations and histories are retained because they are synchronized anyway.

However, this brings massive disadvantages for a specific user group: people who have deactivated their Facebook account but continue to use Messenger. In the future, you will be denied access to the desktop unless you reactivate your profile. Alternatively, they have to resort to mobile apps in order to remain reachable. The decision marks a turnaround in the group’s long-standing strategy.

Originally launched in 2008 as Facebook Chat, the service was gradually spun off following the acquisition of group messaging service Beluga in 2011. In 2014, the company even aggressively removed the chat feature from the main app to encourage use of the separate application – a move that drew a lot of criticism at the time. Since 2023, however, Meta has been rowing back and integrating the messaging functions more closely into the Facebook environment.

Analysts also suspect that the role is a reaction to antitrust proceedings by the US authority FTC. The logic behind it: The more closely the services are technically and operationally intertwined, the more difficult it would be for a court-ordered break-up of the company in the future.

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