You had mail: AOL finally discontinues dial-up Internet service

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More than 40 years after starting as a very early Apple service, AOL is finally ending its dial-up Internet service, shuttering a service that helped usher in the Internet age for tens of millions of people around the world.

Retro 56K fax modem with brand 'USR' partially visible; large, bold letters 'AOL' overlaying the device.
AOL is dropping dial-up



Older Mac users will remember the early days of the Internet and the dominance of AOL. Decades later, the circle has closed as AOL says it will start to shut down its dial-up Internet service.

On a support page titled "Dial-up Internet to be discontinued," updated on August 8, AOL warns that it has decided to end its dial-up service. It will no longer make dial-up available via AOL plans.

On September 30, 2025, AOL says that its dial-up service and associated software, the AOL Dialer and AOL Shield, will be discontinued. The shutdown will not affect any other AOL plan benefits that users may continue to use.

As for why dial-up is being shuttered, AOL says it "routinely evaluates its products and services," but doesn't disclose why it decided to discontinue dial-up access. The most obvious reason is due to the ubiquity of other, considerably faster, connections available to almost everyone.

That doesn't take away the fact that AOL was how millions of people were introduced to the Internet.

First-mover dominance



Back in the late 1980s, the Internet wasn't a digital utility as it is now. There was no cellular Internet, no smartphones, and a telecommunications infrastructure not built for digital communications.

Connecting to the Internet was hard, as you had to use a modem with a phone line that communicated at very slow speeds. Not to mention a fairly difficult process to set up the connection, and that the World Wide Web was only just starting to become a thing.

AOL itself started back in 1983 under the name Control Video Corporation, offering online services for the Atari 2600 console. After failing, it became Quantum Computer Services in 1985, eventually launching AppleLink in 1988 to connect Macintosh computers together.

Our Managing Editor Mike Wuerthele was working at an Apple dealership in the late eighties, and used Apple Link there.

With the launch of PC Link for IBM-compatible PCs in 1988 and parting from Apple in October 1989, the company rebranded itself as America Online, or AOL. Unlike the rival incumbent Compuserve, AOL was pitched as a user-friendly way for non-technical people to get on the Internet.

It was still a far cry from the hyper-speed connectivity available now. Even at its height, dial-up connections could get up to 56 kilobits per second under ideal conditions, while modern connections are measured in megabits and gigabits.

Blue triangular logo with a stylized eye above the words 'America Online' in bold font.
The 90's era logo for AOL



Most of the service was also what's considered a "walled garden," with features that were only available through AOL itself and that it wasn't the actual, untamed Internet.

The rebrand and refocus was a decision that paid off, and allowed AOL to grow considerably within a few years.

In the 1990s, AOL grew along with the wider use of computers, thanks to the introduction of graphical operating systems and other elements. There was also a period when AOL became well-known for distributing so many CDs containing AOL trials for its marketing.

Millions signed up, with it counting ten million customers by 1995.

The sheer number of users led to massive financial success and inevitable acquisitions. This included WebCrawler in 1995, eWorld in 1996, and competitor CompuServe in 1998.

Broadband and decline



In the 2000s, other forms of connectivity than dial-up started to become more prevalent. Cable Internet services, among others, were cropping up in major cities.

These faster connections were a credible threat to dial-up services, and started to pull customers away. Later in the decade, cellular connectivity became another danger for dial-up services, led by Apple's iPhone.

With the ease of access available from smartphones, as well as the growing availability of broadband services at home and at work, dial-up's days were numbered.

However, while depreciated by society, dial-up still had its uses. Low-income families or those who lived in rural areas where broadband wasn't an option could still use dial-up to get online.

Even after the AOL Time Warner acquisition and the 2015 acquisition by Verizon, AOL was still a popular service. Astoundingly, it counted about two million dial-up subscribers at the time.

Despite managing to still have a significant number of dial-up users, that wouldn't be for too long.

In the 2021 acquisition of assets from Verizon by Apollo Global Management, AOL was said to have 1.5 million people paying for services. However, this was more for technical support and software, rather than for actual Internet access.

A CNBC report at the time reports that the dial-up user count was "in the low thousands."

The writing has been on the wall for a long time for AOL's dial-up service. Ending the service was an inevitability, albeit one that has taken far longer than many would expect.

While it dies off, not with a bang but a whimper, AOL's dial-up is still remembered as one of the most transformative services in the Internet age.



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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 12
    Oferofer Posts: 288unconfirmed, member
    AOL is still around???
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 2 of 12
    I must be an 'older' Mac user as my first forays online were with Compuserve and AOL, both dial-up. I haven't used a modem for over 20 years!

    Interesting article though brought back some great memories!
    AnObserverronnOferdigital_guyAlex1N
     5Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 3 of 12
    MplsPmplsp Posts: 4,182member
    I must be an 'older' Mac user as my first forays online were with Compuserve and AOL, both dial-up. I haven't used a modem for over 20 years!

    Interesting article though brought back some great memories!
    Ahhh, compuserve! I remember them, too!

    Actually, you do still have a modem, it's probably just a cable modem or a fiber modem. 

    I imagine dialup still provided a means of providing basic connectivity for more remote areas with no broadband access. Star Link has likely taken over that market. Even basic emails use so much data now that I imagine dialup must have been incredibly frustrating to use.
    ronnOferdigital_guyAlex1N
     4Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 4 of 12
    yyzguyyyzguy Posts: 82member
    I think their popularity exploded when they went to a flat price instead of charging by how long you were connected.  I worked with someone who racked up a $300 bill in their first month (even with AOL giving warnings about excessive use)
    OferronnappleinsideruserAlex1Nzeus423dewme
     6Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 5 of 12
    ronnronn Posts: 708member
    My first foray online was via Compuserve. I detested AOL and had a younger cousin screw up my 1st iMac trying to install AOL on it even though we told him to not mess with it. My last interaction with AOL was going to get a damn install disc for my boss during my Publishing internship 25+ years ago. Couldn't believe I couldn't find one when they were so ubiquitous. Finally went to J&R Music World and took a disc from a tech magazine.
    OferAlex1N
     2Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 6 of 12
    I just miss the free floppies.  AOL became utterly useless to me when they switched to coasters with holes in the middle.
    Ofer
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 7 of 12
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,671member
    I started with AOL dial-up too. Their tech support got me over a lot of hurdles to getting and staying online.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 8 of 12
    zeus423zeus423 Posts: 293member
    I spent way too many nights on AOL in various chat rooms, using AOL Instant Messenger, and playing Yahoo Games. eWorld was a very friendly crowd and was sorely missed when it closed. Good times with good people, a few of which I'm still friends with today.
    darbus69
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 9 of 12
    killroykillroy Posts: 298member
    Ofer said:
    AOL is still around???
    It's Yahoo and 10% of Verizon.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 10 of 12
    killroykillroy Posts: 298member
    I just miss the free floppies.  AOL became utterly useless to me when they switched to coasters with holes in the middle.
    They made for good targets at the  rifle range.
    edited 9:16AM
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  • Reply 11 of 12
    dewmedewme Posts: 6,115member
    killroy said:
    I just miss the free floppies.  AOL became utterly useless to me when they switched to coasters with holes in the middle.
    They made for good targets at the  rifle range.
    I think you're referring to the CDs, which arrived in great frequency and quantity in my mailbox, stuffed into magazines, available for free just about everywhere including supermarkets, Walmart, Best Buy, Circuit City, CompUSA, etc. 

    I imagine that future archeologists will likely come upon a shiny layer of AOL CDs sometime the very distant future when they're digging through what will then be the ancient remains of our civilization.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 12 of 12
    jpellinojpellino Posts: 720member
    Well, there was corporate AppleLink for Apple itself, which we used as an Apple external research site, then AppleLink Personal Edition, then eWorld.  Did beta on the latter two. Still have my eWorld Beta Tester shirt.  The consumer version updates would come out on 3.5” floppies, hard coded with 50% reduced prices for beta testers. They sent the 1.0 floppies out, but forgot to change the pricing code. AOL was so small that Steve Case himself was calling beta testers at home to explain that we needed to send in again as much payment as our past six months. Um, no… I negotiated to send in double my future charges until I was caught up. 
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