OnePlus is reportedly preparing to pull out of the US and Europe entirely, according to a new report from German outlet WinFuture. To be clear up front: this is a report, not an official announcement. Citing unnamed “well-informed sources” from closed-door press briefings, WinFuture says OnePlus and parent company Oppo are set to confirm a full withdrawal of the OnePlus brand from both Western regions “in the coming days.” Nothing has been confirmed by OnePlus or Oppo yet, so treat the specifics below as a credible but single-sourced claim about a OnePlus US and Europe exit — not a done deal.

One thing worth stating plainly before anyone panics: the report says India and China are not part of this withdrawal, and OnePlus will keep operating normally in both markets. If you’re reading this from India, your next OnePlus purchase isn’t going anywhere — but “not affected” turns out to be doing a lot of work in that sentence, as we’ll come back to.
What the OnePlus US and Europe exit report actually claims
Per WinFuture, if the plan is confirmed, OnePlus would stop selling new smartphones, tablets, and wearables across the US and Europe. There’s no dramatic overnight shutdown described — instead, existing retail stock would be sold off over the coming weeks and months with no restocking planned. European inventory is already reportedly close to cleared out.
It’s important to understand what this report is and isn’t. WinFuture is the origin. The story has since been picked up by 9to5Google, BGR, Digital Trends, AndroidHeadlines and others, but every one of those outlets is citing WinFuture — they’re relaying the same report, not independently confirming it with their own sources. This is one report being amplified widely, not several newsrooms each verifying the same fact.
What happens to existing OnePlus owners
If you already own a OnePlus phone, watch, or tablet in these regions, the report is more reassuring here: OnePlus and Oppo have reportedly said software updates, security patches, and warranty support will continue for already-sold devices through their normal lifecycle. For context, the current flagship OnePlus 15 launched with a promise of 4 years of OS updates and 6 years of security patches — that’s the kind of commitment owners are being told will still be honored.
The caveat: the report doesn’t spell out exact end dates for older models, so if you’re on a two- or three-year-old OnePlus, “normal lifecycle” isn’t a specific promise you can hold anyone to yet. Support after a market exit is only as good as the local service infrastructure that stays behind — and that’s the part these announcements tend to leave vague.
Why a single-source report is still worth taking seriously
Normally a single-sourced rumor deserves a shrug. This one has history behind it. Back in April 2026, following reports (from 9to5Google and tipster Yogesh Brar) that OnePlus might shut down parts of its regional presence, and after a string of European staff departures — including UK and Spain country manager Serban Chiscop plus PR managers for those countries and the EU — OnePlus’s European division head publicly acknowledged the company was “evaluating its regional roadmap and product strategy,” while insisting support and update promises were “fully guaranteed.”
That statement didn’t confirm a withdrawal, but it was the first time OnePlus admitted on the record that something was shifting. The company has also, at other points, flatly denied shutdown talk, framing it as “part of regular operations, not a prediction for operational shutdown.” A pattern of denials followed by quiet confirmations is precisely why this report is credible enough to cover — even though it still isn’t confirmed.
India is “safe” — so why should Indian buyers care?
Here’s the part that gets lost in the relief. This Western retreat doesn’t stand alone. It lines up with a separate, already-reported plan for OxygenOS and Realme UI to be discontinued and merged into Oppo’s ColorOS codebase — which we covered here after Smartprix reported it on July 3, with 9to5Google and Digital Trends corroborating.
Put the two together and a clearer story emerges: OnePlus looks less like an independently engineered flagship challenger and more like a nameplate being absorbed into Oppo’s platform and business machinery. The US and Europe lose the brand outright; India and China keep the logo, but the software identity that made a OnePlus feel like a OnePlus — clean, fast OxygenOS, a distinct roadmap — may be folding into Oppo regardless of market.
So the honest read for Indian readers isn’t “nothing to worry about.” It’s that the OnePlus you’ve known could be fading everywhere, not just in the West, even if phones with the OnePlus badge keep shipping here. Given the track record — the April statement, the employee exits, and now this report — the company’s reassurances are worth taking with a healthy dose of skepticism until there’s paperwork to back them up.
What happens next?
WinFuture expects an official statement “in the coming days,” so a confirmation or denial should land this week. Until then, if you’re in the US or Europe eyeing a OnePlus device, it’s reasonable to hold off until the support situation is spelled out in writing. If you’re in India, nothing changes today — but it’s worth watching where OxygenOS is headed.
Sources: WinFuture (original report); corroborating coverage relaying that report from 9to5Google, BGR and Digital Trends.






