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Reading: End of an era for GPT-4.5 as OpenAI moves forward
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End of an era for GPT-4.5 as OpenAI moves forward

MAYA A.
MAYA A.
May 30

OpenAI is phasing out the last remnants of its GPT-4 family, marking another step in the swift evolution of consumer AI tools. The company confirmed in recent updates that GPT-4.5, its final accessible GPT-4 variant, will be retired at the end of June, while the o3 model follows in late August. Both remain restricted to paid ChatGPT subscribers, leaving the free tier untouched since it already runs on newer GPT-5.5 architecture.

This transition arrives roughly three years after the GPT-4 series first reached users in 2023. At the time, those models represented a significant leap in accessible language capabilities, powering more coherent conversations and practical applications than earlier versions. They helped shift AI from experimental curiosity to daily utility for millions, influencing everything from writing assistance to basic coding support. Yet the pace of replacement has been relentless. What once felt like a stable foundation now appears temporary, as OpenAI continues to push newer systems that claim improved performance across benchmarks.

For many regular users, the change carries subtle drawbacks. Some report that older models handle specific creative or nuanced tasks more reliably, avoiding the occasional overconfidence or stylistic quirks found in later iterations. There is also an emotional layer: dedicated users often develop preferences for the distinct “personalities” that emerge from each model, much like choosing a familiar writing companion over a faster but less predictable one. Retiring these systems risks disrupting workflows built around their particular strengths, even if aggregate metrics favor the replacements.

The move fits a broader pattern in the AI sector, where companies prioritize rapid advancement over longevity. While this accelerates progress, it can frustrate those seeking consistency rather than constant upgrades. Paid subscribers, who effectively bankroll much of this experimentation, may feel the impact most acutely as access to familiar tools expires. Free users, meanwhile, operate on the cutting edge by default, though this also means they experience every shift without warning.

Looking back, the GPT-4 era coincided with explosive growth in public interest and investment in generative AI. It normalized the technology for everyday applications, yet also highlighted limitations around accuracy, bias, and resource demands that newer models still grapple with. As OpenAI sunsets these legacy options, it underscores how quickly tools that once defined an industry can become outdated. The company has not detailed what, if any, migration support it will offer affected users.

Ultimately, this retirement reflects the double-edged reality of fast-moving technology: genuine improvements arrive alongside the quiet loss of what worked well enough for many. Subscribers have until June 27 to use GPT-4.5 and until August 26 for o3 before both are fully withdrawn.

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