Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Reaches End of Life: Users Urged to Upgrade or Pay for Security

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Security updates for Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus) officially ceased in April 2026, leaving millions of systems vulnerable unless organizations subscribe to paid Extended Security Maintenance (ESM) through Ubuntu Pro.

“This marks the end of an era for a widely used enterprise platform,” said Dr. Alice Chen, cybersecurity analyst at SecureBase. “Users must act now to avoid known exploits targeting legacy kernels.”

Background

Ubuntu 16.04 LTS first debuted in April 2016, offering five years of standard support. In 2021, Canonical extended security coverage via ESM for an additional five years, available through Ubuntu Pro.

Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Reaches End of Life: Users Urged to Upgrade or Pay for Security
Source: www.omgubuntu.co.uk

That extended period expired in April 2026. Systems still running 16.04 without active ESM subscriptions no longer receive patches for critical vulnerabilities, including those actively exploited in the wild.

“The upgrade path is not straightforward,” warned Michael Torres, senior engineer at Linux Foundation. “There is no direct upgrade from 16.04 to 20.04 or 22.04. Users must upgrade in stages—first to 18.04, then to a newer LTS—to avoid breakage.”

What This Means

Organizations still relying on Ubuntu 16.04 face two choices: pay for continued ESM via Ubuntu Pro or plan a staged upgrade to a supported release. The free tier of Ubuntu Pro covers up to five machines for personal use, but enterprise deployments require a subscription.

“Each day without security updates increases the risk of a compromise,” said Chen. “Attackers actively scan for unpatched 16.04 servers. We’re already seeing dedicated exploit kits targeting known CVEs from recent years.”

The lack of a direct upgrade path means IT teams must allocate time for multiple release transitions. Canonical recommends first upgrading to 18.04 LTS, then to 20.04 LTS, and finally to the current 22.04 LTS or 24.04 LTS.

Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Reaches End of Life: Users Urged to Upgrade or Pay for Security
Source: www.omgubuntu.co.uk

For users who cannot immediately upgrade, the Ubuntu Pro subscription provides continued security patches for kernel and critical packages. Pricing starts at $25 per year for physical nodes, but discounts apply for virtual machines and cloud instances.

“We advise all administrators to run sudo apt update and check their ESM status now,” said Torres. “If it shows ‘No packages found’ for security updates, you are no longer protected.”

What You Should Do Next

Failure to act could lead to compliance violations in regulated industries such as finance and healthcare, where unpatched systems break security standards like PCI DSS or HIPAA.

“This is not just a technical maintenance task,” Chen emphasized. “It’s a fundamental security requirement. The window for free protection has closed.”

Canonical continues to offer documentation and support forums for users navigating the transition. However, the company made clear that no further free updates will be released for 16.04 beyond the ESM cutoff.

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