Meta is discontinuing end-to-end encryption for Instagram direct messages, according to an update to the platform’s Help Center documentation. After May 8, 2026, encrypted messaging on Instagram will no longer be supported, and existing encrypted chats will lose their protection.
The company has not made a formal public announcement. Instead, the change was disclosed through a quietly updated support page stating that affected users will see instructions on how to download any media or messages they want to keep before the deadline. Users on older versions of the app may need to update before they can export their data.
Meta first began testing end-to-end encryption for Instagram DMs in 2021 as part of CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s stated “privacy-focused vision for social networking.” The feature was never enabled by default and was only available in select regions. Meta says the decision comes down to usage, with very few Instagram users having actually enabled encrypted messaging, making the feature difficult to justify maintaining.
The company is recommending that users who want secure messaging move those conversations to WhatsApp, where end-to-end encryption remains a core feature. That guidance underscores how Meta is dividing its messaging strategy across its apps, with Instagram positioned for casual social interaction and WhatsApp as the privacy-focused option.
The removal raises serious concerns among privacy advocates. Without end-to-end encryption, Meta will be able to proactively scan Instagram messages for illegal material and provide legal authorities with access to those messages when requested. Most governments have been pushing for access to private conversations as a measure against sharing illegal content, including child sexual abuse material.
Experts have expressed concern about whether unencrypted messages could be used to train AI models, and whether Meta might eventually remove encryption from WhatsApp as well. Security-focused messaging apps may attract users seeking stronger privacy guarantees as a result of the change.
The move follows what OpenAI recently agreed to in a deal with Pentagon, whereby the chats with ChatGPT are no longer protected. because many messaging platforms are currently expanding encryption protections, while Instagram is now moving in the opposite direction. Meta has not explained whether the change will also affect encrypted voice and video calls on Instagram, or whether similar changes are planned for Facebook Messenger.

