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Microsoft hangs up on Skype: Service to shut down May 5, 2025

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After kickstarting the market for making calls over the internet 23 years ago, Skype is closing down. Microsoft, which acquired the messaging and calling app 14 years ago, said it will be retiring it from active duty on May 5 to double down on Teams. Skype users have 10 weeks to decide what they want to do with their account.

It's not clear how many people are impacted. The most recent numbers that Microsoft had shared were in 2023, when it said it had more than 36 million users -- a long way from Skype's peak of 300 million users.

"We know this is a big deal for our Skype users, and we're very grateful for their support of Skype and all the learnings that have factored into Teams over the last seven years," Jeff Teper, president of Microsoft 365 collaborative Apps and platforms, told TechCrunch in an interview this week. "At this point, putting all our focus behind Teams will let us give a simpler message and drive faster innovation."

Between now and May 5, users will have the option to migrate all their contacts and chat data over to Microsoft's Teams platform. Alternatively, users can download their Skype data using the app's built-in export tool.

The business case

The news will come as little surprise to those who have followed Skype in recent years, and in many ways, the writing has been on the wall since 2016, when Microsoft debuted Teams.

While Microsoft had launched a specific Skype for Business product in 2015, Teams' arrival signaled a new direction for Microsoft in the cloud communications space. Many likened Teams to a Slack clone, but the bigger ambition was to build a platform that would give space for collaboration and communication across a wide range of Microsoft and other apps, and that included video and text chatting -- a direct overlap with Skype.

Microsoft then revealed plans to phase out Skype for Business in 2017, concluding those efforts four years later, in 2021. That same year, Microsoft selected Teams as the integrated communications app of choice on Windows 11, relegating Skype to the sidelines.

Fast-forward to December 2024, TechCrunch reported that Microsoft had stopped letting Skype users add credit to their accounts, or buy Skype phone numbers, pushing users to monthly subscriptions and Skype-to-phone plans instead.

And so this takes us to today's news, signalling the end of a brand and company that was one of the first big tech startups to launch out of Europe in the dawdling days of dial-up.

Skype's death knell comes two years after Microsoft started rolling out an entirely rebuilt, rearchitected Teams desktop and web app. In those two years, Teper says consumer calling minutes in Teams has grown fourfold, though he declined to say how many consumers make up its 320 million user base.