WhatsApp is preparing a policy shift that will remove non-Meta AI chatbots from the platform, marking a notable change in how the company manages third-party tools inside its messaging ecosystem. The update, which takes effect on January 15, 2026, will prohibit users from running external large language model chatbots such as ChatGPT, Microsoft’s Copilot, and other independent AI assistants within WhatsApp’s interface. For WhatsApp Business users, that date also serves as the final deadline to continue using any non-Meta chatbot integrations.
The move follows earlier announcements from OpenAI and Microsoft, both of which confirmed they would be discontinuing support for their chatbots on WhatsApp. Their withdrawals signaled that Meta was preparing a broader policy adjustment, one that aligns with the company’s growing emphasis on its in-house AI services. While the change is positioned as a terms-of-service update, the practical outcome is a tighter ecosystem where Meta retains more control over how AI functions inside the platform.
A narrow exception is being made for businesses that rely on AI bots for customer support. Those tools will remain operational, suggesting that Meta sees commercial use cases as distinct from consumer-facing chatbot experimentation. Even so, the parameters of what qualifies as an approved business bot aren’t yet fully detailed, leaving open questions about how smaller companies or independent developers will be affected.
The migration experience will differ depending on which chatbot users rely on. ChatGPT users will have the option to transfer their WhatsApp chat history, preserving past interactions as they transition away from the platform. Copilot, however, won’t offer any migration pathway, meaning conversations tied to Microsoft’s assistant will no longer be accessible once support ends. This discrepancy highlights how uneven the wind-down process can be when major platforms adjust integrations without a unified approach.
For everyday users, the shift may not immediately disrupt how they use WhatsApp, but it does illustrate a broader trend across messaging platforms: companies are increasingly positioning their own AI tools as the default option while limiting outside competitors. By removing third-party chatbots, Meta is reinforcing a closed ecosystem where its own AI models take center stage, shaping the future capabilities available inside the app. Whether this leads to a more consistent user experience or simply reduces choice remains an open question, especially as AI assistants become more embedded in communication tools.
