Bad news for long-time Bose fans — and especially for anyone still rocking the company’s classic SoundTouch speakers. Reports have confirmed that Bose will officially end support for its SoundTouch wireless ecosystem in February 2026, effectively cutting off cloud-based streaming and multi-room features that once made these products so appealing.
In plain English: your SoundTouch speakers will still play sound, but only via Bluetooth, AUX, or HDMI. Everything else — multi-room sync, Spotify Connect, TuneIn radio — will vanish into the digital void.

Reports have surfaced online that the American company Bose will discontinue support for its SoundTouch wireless technology starting in February 2026
The End of an Era
Launched back in 2013, Bose SoundTouch was the company’s bold entry into the world of wireless multi-room audio, competing head-on with Sonos. Models like the SoundTouch 10, 20, and 30, along with the SoundTouch 300 soundbar and Series III devices, brought seamless control, built-in streaming, and app-driven convenience to Bose’s trademark sound quality.
But all of that is coming to an abrupt halt. According to Bose’s official statement, maintaining the cloud infrastructure for such an old platform has become “unsustainable.” Once the switch is flipped on February 18, 2026, SoundTouch devices will lose access to online music services and the SoundTouch app ecosystem. Bose confirms that no new updates or security patches will follow — and there’s no migration path or trade-in offer in sight.
“If your SoundTouch product supports Bluetooth, Aux, or HDMI, you can still enjoy high-quality audio playback from connected devices,” Bose explains on its support page — a polite way of saying: you’re on your own.
A Familiar Story — But a Harder Blow
This isn’t the first time a major audio brand has pulled the plug on older tech. In 2020, Sonos caused a stir when it discontinued updates for its first-generation products. The difference? Sonos devices continued to work via the legacy S1 app, and the company even offered a trade-in program to ease the blow.

SoundTouch technology was launched in 2013. Bose states that it “can no longer support the development and maintenance of the cloud infrastructure that powers this older generation of products .”
Bose, on the other hand, seems to be taking a harder line — essentially turning once-premium multi-room systems into standalone Bluetooth speakers overnight. For owners who invested heavily in the SoundTouch ecosystem, that feels less like a phase-out and more like a digital eviction notice.

The company, however, emphasizes: “We remain committed to creating new listening experiences for our customers, powered by modern technology . “
Bose says it’s “committed to creating new listening experiences powered by modern technology,” likely pointing toward its newer Music app platform that powers products like the Smart Ultra Soundbar and Home Speaker series. But without any backward compatibility or upgrade incentives, longtime customers might think twice before investing in another Bose ecosystem that could one day meet the same fate.
For now, the message is clear: come February 2026, SoundTouch will go silent online — for good.

