Amazon just pulled Kindle Store access from every Kindle released before 2013. The hardware still works. Your books still work. Side-loading EPUBs over USB still works.

The fix is the same one that's worked since 2007 — and here's exactly how to do it, step by step:

https://lk0.eu/bks901m

#Bookstodon #ebooks #kindle #FediReads #OpenAccess

Amazon Is Cutting Kindle Store Access on Pre-2013 Kindles.

Starting May 20, 2026, older Kindles lose Store access. The hardware still works — here’s the fix.

Medium

@getbookshelves
"You can still log into Amazon’s “Manage Your Content and Devices” page on the web, download your owned Kindle books as files, and transfer them manually via USB."

No, you can not! They disabled Browser downloads for bought ebooks last year, which was malicious.
There is no fix. If your Kindle is full, then copy files to PC. The Amazon files will only work with that Kindle, unless DRM is removed. Then you can delete via PC and select an ebook at a time on the web page to send.

@freediverx @getbookshelves
Authors need to eat and most don't even make a minimum wage, never mind a living wage.

Amazon has conned too many authors (SP) and small publishers to be "exclusive" on Amazon.
Not like only one supermarket having Heinz beans, but like only one having any baked beans or kidney beans.

@getbookshelves in the medium article it mentions that you can also still download books from your Amazon account and then transfer through usb. That is afaik not true. Download options have disappeared from Amazon accounts last year starting from February and then gradually across various Amazon markets.

@ton I just downloaded a few hundred books from my Kindle to my Chromebook, using a USB cable. Granted, it's a 2017 Paperwhite, but still, it worked.

@getbookshelves

@azteclady @ton @getbookshelves this article details how you can get your books off Kindle (I confirmed the desktop route works today).

https://blog.the-ebook-reader.com/2025/03/11/3-ways-to-download-and-transfer-kindle-ebooks-yeah-its-still-possible/

3 Ways to Download and Transfer Kindle eBooks (Yeah, It's Still Possible)

If you missed the deadline to download your purchased Kindle ebooks from Amazon's website before they took the download and transfer feature away, there's no

The eBook Reader
@azteclady @getbookshelves from which Amazon store is that? See https://www.techradar.com/tablets/ereaders/amazon-just-killed-a-useful-kindle-usb-feature-leaving-me-stuck-with-less-flexibility-for-ebook-downloads-and-backups Feb 2025. My Amazon account in the Dutch market no longer has a download option e.g., removed sometime during 2025
Amazon just killed a useful Kindle USB feature – leaving me stuck with less flexibility for ebook downloads and backups

Download & Transfer via USB is going away

TechRadar

@ton oh my apologies; in the U.S. (I forgot that geo restrictions are hell)

Mind you: there is no "download" option on the storefront; what I did was, once the books were on my device, I connected the device to the Chromebook using the USB charging cable that came with the Kindle (it doesn't work with other USB cables), and that opened a Kindle folder in the chromebook; from there, I could download to a local folder.

(does that make sense?)

@getbookshelves

@azteclady @getbookshelves ah, you mean from the kindle to the Chromebook? I meant from the Amazon website in the account's manage content settings, where you used to be able to download all purchases to PC or laptop and then via USB to the reader device.

@ton Yes, I'm sorry; once it's on the device, you can still download it to have your own copy. Otherwise you are correct, you can no longer download the files directly from the storefront.

@getbookshelves

@getbookshelves I just jailbroke a gen 1 PW. Worked even though it is not registered!
@boxofsnoo @getbookshelves
Oldest Kindles, even if not jailbroken, are not bricked if not registered. Later ones nag and the newest ones are effectively bricked.
@getbookshelves “You will own nothing and you will be happy”. Just glad I got my books in their physical form. Makes lending them to friends a lot easier as well.
@getbookshelves And this is why my ereader is just a tablet with an epaper screen.
It runs KoReader.rocks

@getbookshelves

I got a Boox for when my Kindle eventually dies and have switched back to buying more physical books from bookshop or local bookstores.

I will never buy another Kindle.

@getbookshelves

I would also note physical books are VERY pretty these days. Quite decorative for your shelves!

@getbookshelves the article does not mention KOReader - but it should! This is an alternative reader software that even reads epubs. Not the easiest thing to install, but so worth it. https://koreader.rocks/
KOReader

KOReader is a great shout — it absolutely deserves more visibility. The EPUB rendering and dictionary/highlight support have gotten surprisingly polished for an open source project. Definitely worth the install effort for anyone willing to tinker.

@getbookshelves Article states that Kobo lets you download... they do not, at least in the EU; what Rakuten Kobo delivers in NL is a captive portal link, not an ePub. I just ran smack into this last week, deleted my account with them, backcharged the book and went and bought it straight from the publisher (Baen, who has a rep for not DRMing their books)....

There are a TON of eReader programs for your phone; I had been thinking of getting a separate reader but realised I have my phone with me almost all the time, and being someone who doesn't always carry a bag, a booksized reader is... not convenient... _however_, for them as do, plenty of Android tablets, including eInk ones, that aren't tethered to any one potentially-enshittified company (except Google, and there are ways around that too... /e/OS runs on a number of tablets, not all of them Google or Samsung...)

Also, shameless plug for eBooks.com... they don't have *everything* but they have a *lot*, including some of the DRM'ed stuff... which *could* be a Kobo-like problem but *isn't*, as you still get the actual download *and* their reader app is quite good... and will also let you import from other sources, PDF or ePUB.

(One is bemused that Kindle is using MOBI as a format; that was the first format I ever read an eBook in, on an old Palm Pilot. That's been a minute... one notes that while PDF is older - 1993 vs. 2000 - Adobe (ptui) didn't open the standard for PDF until 2008..)

That Kobo EU experience is eye-opening — a "download" that's actually a captive portal is exactly the kind of thing that erodes trust in ebook stores. Good call going to Baen directly, they've been DRM-free since day one. And the Palm Pilot MOBI nostalgia — what a format journey that's been.

@getbookshelves @NormanDunbar Fook Amazon & Jeff Bozo.

Also fook Audible … get Audiobooks from Libro.fm

@getbookshelves
Big tech reminding us yet again why we need to build human-centred alternatives that aren't controlled by their corporate interests.

(See also: Why we're on the Fedi.)

@getbookshelves Perfect time to hack your Kindle and get KO Reader on it.
@getbookshelves Finally, I'll stop getting the Ads. The With Ads version showed up long after I bought my Kindle, so Amazon so magnanimously decided that meant I didn't pay for ad-free and updated my OS to include them! (I f'ing would have, you monster.)
Adding ads retroactively to hardware you already paid for is genuinely grim. At least with the older Kindles being cut off from the store, no more forced OS updates — accidental silver lining.
@sfwrtr @getbookshelves I just so happen to have observed that at least some older models will not download ads if left on airplane mode until a sync, and airplane mode is re-enabled immediately after the sync uploads a book (uncertain if this impacts notes syncing.) At least I’ve not seen ads in years. I was just trying to conserve battery in between charges when I figured this out.

I clicked, so you don't need to:

The Fix: Download free EPUBs (Standard Ebooks/Gutenberg), convert to MOBI via Calibre if needed, and transfer them to your Kindle's documents folder via USB.
Critical Warning: Do not factory-reset or deregister your old Kindle after May 20. You will be unable to re-register it, which effectively bricks the device. As long as you avoid this, your E-reader will remain functional.

@getbookshelves So basically Amazon is only preventing the owners of an old Kindle to buy new books from Amazon. Everything else works... How ironic! Or is it a sign of Amazon's strength, as their customers don't want to buy anywhere else?