Nintendo is taking Mario Kart Tour offline for good. The mobile racing game, which launched in 2019 and brought Nintendo’s beloved kart-racing franchise to smartphones, will shut down on September 30, 2026 at 2 AM ET β and unlike the company’s last mobile sunset, there will be no offline version to fall back on.

Mario Kart Tour will be permanently taken offline on September 30, 2026, with no offline mode planned. (Image: Pixabay)
The End of the Road
In an announcement posted to the game’s official channels, Nintendo confirmed that Mario Kart Tour will cease operations in just under three months. The company had already signaled the game’s decline by halting new content updates in late 2023, when it stopped adding new courses, drivers, karts, and gliders β effectively placing the title in maintenance mode.
The writing has been on the wall for some time. With no meaningful new content arriving for over two years, the player base had dwindled significantly, making the decision to pull the plug an expected β if still disappointing β outcome for the game’s remaining dedicated fans.
No Offline Mode Unlike Pocket Camp
Perhaps the most significant detail in the announcement is that Nintendo has no plans to release an offline version of Mario Kart Tour. This sets it apart from Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp, which Nintendo shut down in late 2024 but subsequently re-released as a paid, offline-friendly title (Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp Complete).
For Mario Kart Tour, that means when the servers go dark on September 30, the game will simply cease to function. Any in-game progress, unlocked drivers, karts, and gliders will be lost. Nintendo is not offering a buyout option or a way to export save data.
Gold Pass and In-Game Purchases Affected
Nintendo has already stopped selling the game’s digital currency, and new subscriptions and auto-renewals for the Gold Pass β the monthly subscription that granted access to extra rewards, challenges, and a 200cc speed mode β have been suspended.
However, existing Gold Pass subscribers will retain access to most premium features (excluding “continuous-subscription benefits”) at no additional cost until the shutdown. And starting August 5 at 2 AM ET, all players β regardless of subscription status β will be able to access those same premium benefits for free during the game’s final weeks.
Nintendo’s Mobile Strategy Remains Alive
Despite this shutdown, Nintendo has not abandoned mobile gaming altogether. The company recently launched Pictonico!, a WarioWare-inspired title that cleverly incorporates photos from the player’s camera roll into bite-sized minigames. The evergreen Super Mario Run remains available nearly a decade after its debut, and Fire Emblem Heroes β alongside last year’s Fire Emblem Shadows β continues to generate steady revenue.
Third-party titles on Nintendo-adjacent IP also remain strong: PokΓ©mon Go celebrated its 10th anniversary this week, and Pikmin Bloom is still active. (Nintendo does not directly operate those titles, but they bear its characters.)
A Legacy of Mobile Racing
Mario Kart Tour was never the blockbuster that Mario Kart 8 Deluxe or the upcoming Mario Kart for the Switch successor have been, but it served an important role in bringing Nintendo’s premier racing franchise to a mobile audience. Over its seven-year run, the game introduced unique mechanics like touch-based steering and auto-accelerate, making the franchise accessible to a broader casual audience.
The game also pioneered Nintendo’s first serious foray into mobile live-service gaming with seasonal “tours” that rotated themed content. While that model ultimately wasn’t sustainable enough to justify continued development, it laid groundwork for how Nintendo approaches mobile game operations β lessons the company is now applying to newer titles like Pictonico!.
For fans who want to get in a few last races, the clock is ticking. Mario Kart Tour will be playable in full β with all Gold Pass features unlocked for everyone starting August 5 β until servers go dark on September 30.