Business Microsoft is shutting down Skype in favor of Teams - Skype is shutting down on May 5, 2025

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Microsoft is shutting down Skype in favor of Teams​

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Skype will be retired on May 5th, and existing users will need to export their data or migrate to Teams.

It’s the end of an era. Microsoft is shutting down Skype in May and replacing it with the free version of Microsoft Teams for consumers. Existing Skype users will be able to log in to the Microsoft Teams app and have their message history, group chats, and contacts all automatically available without having to create another account, or they can choose to export their data instead. Microsoft is also phasing out support for calling domestic or international numbers.

”Skype users will be in control, they’ll have the choice,” says Jeff Teper, president of Microsoft 365 collaborative apps and platforms, in an interview with The Verge. “They can migrate their conversation history and their contacts out and move on if they want, or they can migrate to Teams.”

If you choose to move on and bring your Skype data with you, the exported data will include photos and conversation history. Microsoft also made a tool to easily view existing Skype chat history if you don’t want to move to Teams.

Skype will remain online until May 5th, so existing users will have around 60 days to decide whether they want to switch to Microsoft Teams or export their data. “If they do want to come to Teams then the first-run is pretty instantaneous because we’ve already done the work on the backend to restore their contacts, message history, and call logs,” says Amit Fulay, vice president of product at Microsoft.
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Skype users will soon see a prompt to move to Microsoft Teams. Image: Microsoft

The transition to Microsoft Teams will keep Skype group chats intact, and during the 60-day window, Microsoft will also maintain interoperability so you can message contacts on Teams and those messages will be delivered to friends still using Skype.

If you do move to Microsoft Teams, there’s one big part of Skype that’s disappearing, though. Microsoft is removing the telephony parts that allow you to call domestic or international numbers or people’s cellphones. “Part of the reason is we look at the usage and the trends, and this functionality was great at the time when voice over IP (VoIP) wasn’t available and mobile data plans were very expensive,” explains Fulay. “If we look at the future, that’s not a thing we want to be in.”

Microsoft will honor existing Skype credits, but it will no longer offer new customers access to paid Skype features that allow you to make or receive international and domestic calls. Existing Skype subscription users will be able to use their Skype credits and subscriptions inside Microsoft Teams until the end of their next renewal period. Existing Skype Number users will also need to port their number over to another provider, as Microsoft is no longer supporting this, either.

The Skype Dial Pad will be part of Teams temporarily for existing credits and subscriptions, but Microsoft isn’t going to offer calling plans to Teams consumers like it does for businesses. “The world has really moved on,” says Teper. “Probably the biggest thing is higher bandwidth and lower data plan cost, from us and others, has really driven almost all of the traffic to VoIP.”

The admission of consumers moving on from calling phone numbers from Skype is also a large part of why the service is shutting down nearly 14 years after Microsoft first acquired it for $8.5 billion. Over the last decade, services like FaceTime, Messenger, and WhatsApp have made it simple to connect with friends through messaging, calls, and video chats in a way that Microsoft struggled to compete with through Skype and its many design iterations.

This was particularly evident in the early stages of the covid-19 pandemic, when consumers flocked to Zoom instead of Skype. “The Skype userbase actually grew at the beginning of the pandemic, and has been pretty flat since,” admits Teper. “It’s not shrunk in some dramatic way. It has been relatively flat over the last few years. We hope we’ll migrate most Skype users… but we want to make sure the users know they’re in control.”

Microsoft will now be fully focused on Teams for consumers, after launching the personal version in 2020. At the time, Microsoft said it was still fully committed to Skype, but it’s been clear in recent years that the company was preparing for the eventual retirement of Skype. In December, Microsoft killed off Skype credits and phone numbers in favor of subscriptions, another sign that the end of Skype was nearing.

“Initially the vision was to have one experience across work and life… but Teams was new and that was not realistically where we were in 2020,” reveals Teper. “So we continued to invest in Skype, and about two to three years ago we started bringing in the free Teams consumer experience with the new client. We wanted to wait until the adoption was at the scale where we could be very convinced it was the right time.”

The Skype retirement won’t result in job cuts, either, at least not immediately. “There’s one team, which is Microsoft Teams and Skype. On the backend it has actually evolved to a common team,” says Teper. “There won’t be layoffs, those folks are going to be working on making things better — whether it’s fun end user features or AI innovation, it’s really about doubling down on Teams.”
 
Is teams any better?
A few of my coworkers still use skype for some reason even though the rest of us don't and it's laggy as fuck. Hopefully this will force them to move on.
 
i always hated skype. but i guess i should go gather my old account since it was already migrated once from msn. that being said msn was better.
 
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I am upset about this not because I use Skype currently, but because I am tired of products I use or options I have being bought up by these giant companies and then systematically dismantled and destroyed. It's like they've figured out that you can stifle innovation and consumer choice if you do it on a longer time scale and not a short one. Maybe I am just jaded by every small game developer being bought for years by EA et al and then shut down one after the other. Same thing here. Every time a product works, it gets bought by MS or Facebook or someone and then rolled into their bullshit before being shut down. I used Skype for years before MS bought it, really pisses me off. Here's an idea, instead of shutting it down why don't you fucking sell it to someone or open source the code.
 
Not feeling any kind of way about that, I think it was around 2017 Skype was basically cleaned out of the people I used it with, it was pretty dominant before but audio quality kept improving with other VoIP applications and Skype just stagnated, Microsoft than ruined it by trying to turn it into some social media shit
 
I am upset about this not because I use Skype currently, but because I am tired of products I use or options I have being bought up by these giant companies and then systematically dismantled and destroyed. It's like they've figured out that you can stifle innovation and consumer choice if you do it on a longer time scale and not a short one. Maybe I am just jaded by every small game developer being bought for years by EA et al and then shut down one after the other. Same thing here. Every time a product works, it gets bought by MS or Facebook or someone and then rolled into their bullshit before being shut down. I used Skype for years before MS bought it, really pisses me off.
MS did the EA method for a good while as well, the Rareware situation being an incredibly infamous case that Rare themselves made constant references or jokes about how badly they were being fucked by MS through the entirety of the script of Banjo Kazooie: Nuts and Bolts. Surprised they managed to "live" through it.
 
Fuck Microsoft with fire.

My workplace used to be anti cloud. Local servers, local accounts, non Office 365, physical telephones. If anything changed, it happened once every 4 years....

Then they switched to office 365. Now Outlook and Excel have random arbitrary changes and bugs introduced. Opening a spreadsheet is unreponsive as hell. You have 5 other spreadsheets open and one of them has a search/replace, or other nagging dialog box open. You can't open up another spreadsheet because having any open dialog box forbids you doing so. In an age of preemptive multitasking operating systems a blocker in one open spreadsheet shouldn't prevent me from opening another instance, but no they all open spreadsheets share one common CPU thread.

Then they switched to Microsoft as their authentication backend. Great. Now I need an app on my phone to login into my work machine. Now every monday, every token for every Microsoft cloud app expires. Wait, I'm not at work, not at my workstations. No we are going to bip your phone to renew your auth token multiple times if you are at work or not. You weren't at your workstation when it happened? Microsoft outlook will now hang until you close and restart.

It goes on... We replaced your personal folder on the network drive with Microsoft One Drive. That means, I can take a photo on my phone, sync it to Onedrive, and I can instantly go to my workstation, crop/edit the photo to share with my coworkers right? No, your photo is only instantly available on the Onedrive website, not instantly available via explorer on your workstation. It will sync to your workstation on it't own sweet time.

I can still open important corporate documents via our network drive? Sorry, your organization has integrated Microsoft Sharepoint. Your internal documents can only be viewed via Sharepoint. Remember Netscape Navigator with iFrames? What was onces under a hierarchical filesystem is now under a series of nested frames within a web browser.

We have a common folder with things like planning and scheduling... Well, these things are now under shared files under Microsoft teams. We'll send you the shared link once, then it will be under the recent files. If you lose the link invite your fucked.

I can call my boss right? No, your internal phone system has been replaced by Microsoft teams. You'll need to verify your Microsoft Authenticator token before, you can make a phone call via a bluetooth headset.

Our ISP has misconfigured their BGP and the all networks routes are flapping. Every customer in the state is down... Your organization is now completely dead in the water, nothing we can do.

I can go to the bathroom and take shit right? Sorry, the bathroom stall door requires Microsoft Authenticator to continue.
 
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Ahh.. Skype.
Who else remembers playing some crappy web games integrated into the program?
Damn. That call sound is an instant nostalgia trigger. Had some good times on Skype back in the day. Lots of memories. It's been many years since I used it but it still makes me sad they're axing it. Just another little reminder of what a graveyard the internet is (and didn't have to be) and it's depressing. Rot in hell already, Microsoft.
 
Skype still exists?!

Well shit, I thought it would've bitten the dust far earlier due to how shitty it got after 2013 (the last time I actually used it). Oh well, RIP
 
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