Sony is closing the PlayStation Store on PS3 and PS Vita, ending new digital purchases on two of its most beloved older platforms after a remarkably long run.
The PS3 launched in 2006 and 2007, depending on the region, while the PS Vita arrived in Japan in late 2011 before reaching North America and Europe in February 2012. By the time the final closures happen in July 2027, Sony will have supported PS3 store purchases for nearly two decades, and PS Vita purchases for more than 15 years.
When will the stores shut down?
The shutdown will happen in phases. PlayStation Store on PS3 will close first in Mexico, Honduras, and Nicaragua starting in August 2026. More Latin American and Middle Eastern countries will follow in late 2026.
For the rest of the world, PlayStation Store on both PS3 and PS Vita will close in July 2027. After that, players will no longer be able to buy new digital games, DLC, or other content on those devices.
Sony says previously purchased content will remain available to download “for the foreseeable future.” The company says the decision comes down to modern commerce systems and updated payment processing standards that PS3 and PS Vita can no longer support at the required level.
The preservation concern is hard to ignore
For many players, the frustration is not only about losing old storefronts. Some PS3 and Vita games still have no modern ports, no physical versions, and no easy way to buy them elsewhere.

One X user summed up that concern by saying many games exclusive to PS3 and Vita will no longer be purchasable, including Sony’s own games that have not been ported or added to its cloud gaming service.
Sony tried to close the PS3 and Vita stores in 2021, then reversed course after strong backlash from players. This new plan gives people more time to buy what they want, but it still leaves the same long-term problem. Once these stores close, a large part of PlayStation’s older digital catalog becomes harder to access legally.
