OpenAI is killing its ChatGPT Atlas browser less than a year after launch OpenAI is shutting down its ChatGPT Atlas browser less than a year after launch, with deprecation targeted for August 9. The company is consolidating Atlas's features into a new desktop app called ChatGPT Work, which includes a built-in browser and cloud-based agent capabilities. The move reflects OpenAI's strategy to focus on a unified productivity platform rather than standalone products. OpenAI is shutting down ChatGPT Atlas, its AI-powered web browser, less than a year after launching it. The company is targeting 9 August for deprecation, The Verge reports https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/963654/openai-chatgpt-atlas-ai-browser-shut-down-sunset . Atlas only arrived in October 2025, pitched as a browser that could carry out tasks on a user’s behalf. Nine months later, it is being retired. The move is not a retreat from browsing so much as a reshuffle. OpenAI confirmed the closure alongside “ChatGPT Work”, a new push that bundles its tools into a single desktop app. Atlas’s ideas live on inside that app. It gains a built-in browser that can visit sites, log into accounts, and download files, plus a separate cloud browser on OpenAI’s servers where agents complete tasks remotely. OpenAI framed the shutdown as learning, not failure. Its James Sun said the new capabilities were built on lessons from Atlas users who “took a leap of faith on a new browser”. From standalone apps to one super app The logic is consolidation. OpenAI is merging ChatGPT, its Codex coding tool https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-codex-micro-hardware-work-louder , and Atlas into one desktop experience, with the new build adding tabs, a password manager, and autofill. The Wall Street Journal had flagged this plan in March, reporting OpenAI wanted a desktop “superapp” to simplify a sprawling product line. ChatGPT Work looks like the result. It also fits a wider tidy-up, as OpenAI has moved to cut “side quests” and refocus on productivity to catch Anthropic. It recently shut its Sora video app and shelved a planned ChatGPT “adult mode”. A young market, already brutal Atlas’s short life says something about the AI browser race. The category is barely a year old, yet crowded, with Perplexity’s Comet and Anthropic’s Claude extension chasing the same agentic-browsing dream. These tools remain rough and risky. Researchers recently tricked six AI browsers, Atlas among them, into leaking user credentials https://thenextweb.com/news/bioshocking-ai-browser-credential-leak-layerx , a reminder that letting an agent roam the web with your logins is not yet safe. The prize is the front door to the web, and everyone wants it. Amazon is putting Alexa in the search bar https://thenextweb.com/news/amazon-alexa-shopping-search-bar-agentic-commerce , while Google’s dominance shows cracks as DuckDuckGo installs jump after its AI-search overhaul https://thenextweb.com/news/duckduckgo-user-surge-google-ai-search-overhaul . OpenAI has decided that door is ChatGPT, not a separate browser. Killing Atlas so quickly is less an admission of defeat than a bet that the assistant, not the browser, is where users will live, a wager it doubled down on by launching GPT-5.6 and ChatGPT Work https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-gpt-5-6-broad-rollout-us-approval the same day. Get the TNW newsletter Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.