Nintendo is preparing to end official sales of the first-generation Switch family in parts of Europe, but the change is not expected to disrupt existing owners. The company says current users will still be able to play purchased games and keep using their accessories.
The shift affects the Nintendo Switch, Switch Lite, and Switch OLED, with distribution set to stop in mid-February 2027 in the Nintendo of Europe market. Until then, the three models are still expected to remain broadly available across Europe through the end of 2026.
What changes for current owners
For people who already own a Switch, Nintendo says access to the Nintendo eShop, Nintendo Switch Online, and other online services will continue for the foreseeable future. The company also says the Switch game catalog will keep expanding even after hardware sales end.
That means the end of official retail sales is mainly a supply-side change, not a shutdown of the ecosystem. Existing consoles should continue to function normally, and the remaining stock at retailers will determine availability after the cutoff date.
| Model | Status Until End of 2026 | Official Sales Cutoff |
|---|---|---|
| Nintendo Switch | Widely available | Mid-February 2027 |
| Switch Lite | Widely available | Mid-February 2027 |
| Switch OLED | Widely available | Mid-February 2027 |
Why the older Switch line is being phased out
Nintendo has not given a formal explanation for ending sales of the original Switch lineup, and it has not said whether the same move will happen outside Nintendo of Europe. The timing, however, appears closely tied to new European Union rules for electronic devices.
Those rules require certain products to use batteries that can be replaced easily by users. The original Switch line can have its battery changed, but only by disassembling the device, which does not meet the easy-replacement direction of the regulation.
Switch 2 is being adjusted for the new rules
Nintendo is already preparing changes for Switch 2 to fit the updated European requirements. A revised version is said to use a removable battery and a 5,172 mAh capacity, which is slightly lower than the current 5,220 mAh unit.
The new design is also expected to increase the console’s weight by about 10 grams, bringing it to roughly 548 grams. Accessories are expected to change as well, including Joy-Con and Joy-Con 2, which are said to be getting batteries that users can replace.
| Product | Planned Change | Reported Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Switch 2 | Removable battery | 5,172 mAh; around 548 grams |
| Joy-Con | Battery replacement support | Updated for user-replaceable batteries |
| Joy-Con 2 | Battery replacement support | Updated for user-replaceable batteries |
Some accessories may disappear from sale
The regulatory changes may also reshape Nintendo’s accessory lineup in Europe. Several older products are reported to be ending sales, including the Switch Pro Controller, the Sega Mega Drive controller, the SNES controller for Switch, and Pokémon Go Plus Plus.
For consumers, that means the new battery rules could affect more than just consoles. Products that are not redesigned to match the regulation risk being removed from official European retail channels.
For now, anyone planning to buy a first-generation Switch in Europe still has a clear window before the official cutoff. After mid-February 2027, the market will rely on whatever stock is left on store shelves.
