Your Chromecast Is Not Dead, Google Confirms a Fix and Corrects Its Own Support Page
It has been a chaotic 72 hours for Chromecast owners after a Google support page erroneously listed five models as deprecated, alongside a sudden streaming outage on first-generation devices.
While headlines quickly declared the entire lineup dead, Google has officially responded. The reality is far less dramatic: active support remains unchanged, and a backend fix has already successfully restored legacy casting.
The Outage and Support Page Confusion
The trouble began when first-generation devices started failing on YouTube and HBO Max.
Then, a Google Nest support page quietly updated to list five Chromecast models as no longer receiving critical security updates.
By Wednesday, headlines were declaring the death of the Chromecast line. Users who assumed they would need to transition immediately to newer hardware, like the Google TV Streamer, began looking for alternatives.
Now, Google has responded, and the reality is far less dramatic than what the week made it appear.
According to 9to5Google, Google confirmed on Friday that a temporary technical glitch affecting the oldest devices had been resolved.
First-gen Chromecast owners who had given up on their legacy dongles are reporting on Reddit that casting is working normally again, same devices, same apps, no hardware changes required.
The Support Page Was an Error, Google Clarifies
The bigger panic came from the support page, not the streaming outage.
As Android Police reported, Google’s Nest device support page briefly listed five Chromecast models, which are no longer receiving critical security updates:
- Chromecast 2nd Gen
- Chromecast Audio
- Chromecast Ultra
- Chromecast 3rd Gen
- Chromecast with Google TV (4K)
This leaves only the 2022 Chromecast with Google TV (HD) as supported.
The update spread quickly, but Google soon clarified. A spokesperson said, “Google is not ending support for Google Chromecasts, and the support page has since been updated with the latest and most accurate information,” per 9to5 Google.
The company confirmed the listing was incorrect and did not reflect any policy change.
The corrected page has now been restored, with all previously listed models back under active support. Google says the incident was an internal documentation error, not any planned phase-out of the Chromecast lineup.
The Longer Picture for Chromecast
The fix is real, but context matters. The 1st Gen Chromecast has already been in end-of-life territory for some time, with some apps dropping support over the years.
Netflix also announced in late 2025 that it was removing casting support for remote-equipped Google TV devices, though older Chromecast puck models were unaffected.
For consumers considering completely moving away from HDMI sticks, exploring the broader ecosystem of certified Android TV boxes offers a more permanent setup for the living room.
Google confirmed that the 2nd Gen, Chromecast Ultra, 3rd Gen, and Chromecast with Google TV (4K) remain in active support. The Chromecast with Google TV (HD) is still under Google’s five-year support plan through 2027.
Google has also started rolling out interface updates to Chromecast with Google TV (4K), suggesting ongoing development rather than maintenance-only support.
Source: Google is not ending security updates for Chromecasts
