Sony has officially announced the closure of the PlayStation Store on both PS3 and PS Vita, with the first shutdowns beginning as soon as August 2026 in select regions. The rest of the world follows by July 2027.
The rollout is staggered by region, and the timeline matters if you've been sitting on a backlog of games you've been meaning to buy.

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When each region loses access
Here's the breakdown Sony confirmed:
The key thing to understand here is that closure means no new purchases. Previously bought content can still be downloaded "for the foreseeable future" after the cutoff dates, so your existing library isn't disappearing overnight. But the window to buy anything new is closing fast for some players.
What Sony actually said
PlayStation exec Sid Shuman addressed the announcement directly, writing that Sony wants to "expand the PlayStation experience on newer devices that most of our users are playing on today." The framing is familiar: resources need to go toward PS5, and legacy storefronts are in the way.
Shuman acknowledged the sentiment, calling PS3 and PS Vita "an important era in our PlayStation history" and saying it "was not an easy decision." Whether you buy that or not, the practical outcome is the same.
Two consoles, two very different stories
The PS Vita launched in December 2011 as Sony's answer to Nintendo's dual-screen DS, and it never quite found its footing. The hardware's proprietary memory cards were expensive, its blockbuster franchise ports didn't land the way Sony hoped, and the device sold an estimated 10 to 15 million units across its lifespan. That's roughly 10% of what the Nintendo DS moved.
The PS3 had a rougher start for different reasons. Its launch price drew complaints, and Microsoft's Xbox 360 was a fierce competitor throughout the generation. But the PS3 recovered, eventually selling 87.4 million consoles. Still only about half of what the PS2 managed, but a respectable legacy by any measure.
Both platforms built devoted communities, and both have libraries with titles that simply aren't available anywhere else. That's what makes this closure sting for a certain type of PlayStation fan.
The bigger picture Sony is building toward
This announcement didn't arrive in isolation. Sony dropped it on the same day as the news that physical disc production for new PlayStation games will end in January 2028, after which all new titles will launch digitally or ship as download codes in boxes. The PS3 and PS Vita store closures fit neatly into that broader direction.
Here's the thing: Sony is consolidating everything around PS5 and whatever comes next. Legacy infrastructure costs money to maintain, and with physical media on the way out, the company is clearly drawing a hard line between past and future.
For players still on those older platforms, the practical advice is simple: check your wishlist now. If you're on PSN and want to make the most of your account while the store still runs, it's worth reviewing what's available. You can also check out our gaming guides for tips on getting more from your PlayStation setup, including how to grab free PSN avatars before limited-time offers expire.
For anyone already looking ahead to new PS5 releases, the Saros file size and pre-load date guide has everything you need to prep your storage before launch day.








