Ask.com has officially shut down as of May 1, 2026, marking the end of a 25‑year‑old search brand that began life as Ask Jeeves in the late 1990s. The site, once known for letting users type questions in natural language instead of keywords, has been discontinued by parent company IAC, which says it is ending its search business to focus on other areas.
Ask Jeeves launched in 1996 with the butler‑style mascot “Jeeves” and a conversational approach to search, encouraging queries like “Where is the nearest pizza place?” rather than short keyword strings. Over time the brand dropped “Jeeves” and rebranded as Ask.com, expanding into a full‑fledged search portal with news, Q&A, and ad‑supported services.
Despite early popularity, Ask could not match the scale of Google and later Bing, and its share of global search traffic dwindled over the years. The rise of mobile‑first discovery and AI‑powered chat assistants further reduced the need for standalone search portals, leaving Ask without a clear competitive edge.
As of the shutdown date, Ask.com no longer functions as a working search engine and instead displays a farewell message thanking users for 25 years of curiosity. Existing bookmarks and default browser settings pointing to Ask.com will no longer work, pushing users toward alternatives such as Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo, or newer AI‑forward search tools.
The closure highlights how quickly tech brands can fade once they lose relevance and scale, even if they helped pioneer important ideas. Ironically, the conversational, question‑style search Ask once championed is now a core feature of modern AI assistants, effectively carrying forward Ask’s original vision on more powerful platforms.
