Original Nintendo Switch Will Be Discontinued In Europe
Next year will mark the 10th anniversary of the original Nintendo Switch, which remains in active production despite the debut of Switch 2 in 2025. However, the Switch’s time will be coming to a close in Europe just shy of a decade after its initial release.
According to a notice on Nintendo’s official site, the Switch, Switch Lite, and Switch OLED will no longer be available to European retailers after mid-February 2027. Nintendo Store will also stop carrying the original Switch models for European markets in that same month.
Nintendo hasn’t signaled when the Switch will be retired in North America, but the company had a greater incentive to shut it down in Europe first. The European Union passed a new regulation that requires Nintendo and other console makers to ship products that allow users to change their own batteries. Changing the design of the first Switch to allow owners to change its batteries wouldn’t be very cost-effective, given it was already near the end of its lifetime. So Nintendo discontinued it instead.
However, Nintendo will comply with Europe’s Right to Repair directive and begin releasing Switch 2 consoles with replaceable batteries as soon as this summer. Nintendo has indicated that these new models are virtually identical to the Switch 2 console that’s already on the market. While those plans are in motion, Nintendo added that “Due to a variety of factors, revised products may not become available in all European countries simultaneously.” Presumably that means the ongoing memory and component shortages may slow down the pace of that rollout.
Given Sony’s recent decision to stop releasing games on disc, Switch 2 is one of the few remaining consoles that still uses physical media. Regardless, Nintendo has leaned more heavily on Game-Key Cards for its current generation of third-party titles on Switch 2, much to the annoyance of games preservation activists.
