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Microsoft Lens is riding into the sunset, if you even remember using it

If you scan on iPhone or Android, you have two deadlines, February 9 for installs, March 9 when scanning shuts off.

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Microsoft Lens retirement is already in motion on iOS and Android, and it’s about to become a real problem if the app still handles your quick paperwork jobs. Think receipts, signed forms, warranty cards, anything you’d normally capture in ten seconds and file later.

Two dates run the whole shutdown. On February 9, 2026, Lens is removed from the App Store and Google Play, which means no easy reinstall if you switch phones or reset your device. On March 9, 2026, Lens stops creating new captures because Microsoft is turning off the cloud service that makes the feature work.

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You should still be able to open what you’ve saved if the app stays on your phone, but Microsoft warns access can depend on being signed into the last account you used in Lens. If any of those files matter, now’s the time to pull them out.

The two deadlines, simplified

February 9 is the last day to make sure Lens is on your device. After that, even a small hiccup, like a reinstall, can turn into a dead end.

March 9 is the day the tool stops being a tool. Lens may remain useful as a viewer for older items, but it won’t help you capture anything new.

If you’ve got a habit built around Lens, don’t wait for the cutoff to break it mid week. Do the boring prep once, then forget about it.

Microsoft wants you in OneDrive and Copilot

Microsoft’s replacement path is clear. Document capture moves into the Scan feature inside OneDrive on mobile, and scanning also shows up inside the Microsoft 365 Copilot app.

The big change is where your files go. OneDrive saves to the cloud by default, and if you prefer keeping copies on your phone, you’ll need an extra step to download them after the capture.

What you should do now

First, make sure Lens is installed anywhere you might still need it before early March. That keeps your short term routine intact.

Next, run a quick test in OneDrive so you know how it behaves. Check that you can save, share, and organize the result the way you actually work.

Finally, export anything important from Lens while it’s still straightforward. Confirm you’re in the right account, move the files somewhere you control, and you won’t have to troubleshoot access after March 9.

If you’re looking for an alternative, check out the best scanner apps out now.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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