Atlas is going away, but its biggest ideas are becoming core parts of ChatGPT.
OpenAI is retiring Atlas, its AI-powered browser, less than a year after its debut, folding the browser's most important features into ChatGPT's expanding productivity tools instead of keeping Atlas as a standalone product.
The company confirmed the move during its ChatGPT Work launch, where it unveiled a series of browsing upgrades across ChatGPT's desktop app, cloud-based agent, and Chrome extension. According to OpenAI's James Sun, the company is targeting Aug. 9 as the deprecation date and will provide more information to Atlas users through email and in-app notifications.
Atlas's technology lives on inside ChatGPT
Rather than abandoning AI-powered browsing, OpenAI is spreading Atlas's capabilities across products people already use.
The updated ChatGPT desktop app now includes a built-in browser with support for multiple tabs, downloads, password management, autofill, enterprise single sign-on, passkeys, printing, and page search. Sun said users can also collaborate with ChatGPT while viewing websites, documents, and dashboards without switching between applications.
OpenAI is also introducing a cloud browser that lets ChatGPT Work agents browse the web remotely to complete tasks such as researching government websites, finding travel options, or submitting contact forms. Users can approve browsing actions, monitor progress through screenshots, or take control of the browser when needed.
Meanwhile, a new ChatGPT Chrome extension brings ChatGPT and Codex directly into the browser, allowing the assistant to understand the current webpage, highlighted text, browser tabs, and local files while keeping conversations synchronized with the desktop app.
Explaining the decision to retire Atlas, Sun wrote on X, "All these capabilities were built on what we learned from Atlas users who took a leap of faith on a new browser." He added, "You taught us how agents can help make browsing and doing work on the open web better, and we are applying these learnings to these new products."
Part of a broader product strategy
The Atlas shutdown follows OpenAI's effort to simplify its growing product lineup. The company has been consolidating products into what has been described as a ChatGPT "super app," combining features previously spread across ChatGPT, Codex, and Atlas.
The move also comes after OpenAI scaled back several side projects, including shutting down the standalone Sora video-generation app, as the company places greater emphasis on productivity features and competition with Anthropic.
Competition in AI browsing remains intense
OpenAI's decision comes as AI companies race to reshape how people interact with the web.
Competitors including Perplexity with Comet and The Browser Company with Dia continue to develop AI-first browsers, while Google and Microsoft are adding AI capabilities directly into Chrome and Edge. Instead of trying to replace existing browsers, OpenAI now appears to be betting that AI browsing works best as a feature embedded inside software people already use.
Atlas may matter more as a blueprint
Atlas may have had a short life as a standalone browser, but its influence could last much longer inside ChatGPT.
By moving its browsing tools into products people already use, OpenAI is removing one of the biggest barriers facing AI browsers: convincing users to switch. The strategy could make agent-powered research and online task completion more accessible, while placing ChatGPT at the center of an increasingly wide range of web-based work.
That convenience comes with higher stakes. As ChatGPT gains access to browser tabs, passwords, local files, and online forms, users and businesses will need clear controls over what the assistant can see and do. Atlas is disappearing as a product, but the questions it raised about privacy, security, and trust are only becoming more important.
Related reading: Learn how OpenAI’s GPT-Live model is making ChatGPT voice conversations faster, smoother, and more natural.


