After years of competing with FiveM for GTA 5 multiplayer dominance, alt:V is shutting down. Take-Two Interactive issued a cease and desist in early March 2026, and the platform has confirmed a phased shutdown culminating in a complete closure on July 6, 2026.
If you run an alt:V server, play on one, or follow the GTA modding scene, this affects you. Here is everything you need to know, including what to do next.
What Happened? The alt:V Shutdown Timeline

The alt:V shutdown did not come without warning. Rockstar's parent company Take-Two Interactive has been tightening its grip on unauthorized GTA multiplayer platforms for years.
March 2, 2026: Take-Two issued a cease and desist to the alt:V development team. alt:V confirmed receipt of the letter and announced that new server registrations would be disabled immediately.
May 4, 2026: The public server list will be taken offline. Existing servers can continue running, but new players will have no way to discover them through the official client.
July 6, 2026: Full shutdown. The alt:V client infrastructure, master server, and all platform services go dark permanently.
The timeline is firm. The alt:V team made clear that they have no legal path to continue operating after Take-Two's action. There is no appeal, no negotiation in progress, and no plan B.
Why Is alt:V Shutting Down?
The short answer is that Rockstar now has an official stake in multiplayer modding, and competing platforms no longer have any legal cover.
Rockstar acquired Cfx.re in 2023. Cfx.re is the organization behind FiveM and RedM. When Rockstar made this acquisition, it signaled a clear strategic direction: FiveM would become the sanctioned platform for GTA 5 multiplayer, backed by a Platform License Agreement. alt:V had no such agreement.