In a move that has surprised the developer community, Google has announced the sunsetting of Firebase Studio (formerly Project IDX), less than a year after its official launch in April 2025.
The announcement, made on March 19, 2026, signals a major consolidation of Google’s AI-assisted development tools. Google is folding the lessons learned from the Firebase Studio preview into its two flagship platforms: Google AI Studio for browser-based prototyping and Google Antigravity for local, “agentic” coding.
The Sunset Timeline
Google is providing a one-year transition window for developers to move their projects.
- March 19, 2026: Sunset announcement. Migration tools have begun rolling out within existing Firebase Studio workspaces.
- June 22, 2026: New workspace creation will be disabled. Users can continue to work on and migrate existing projects but cannot start new ones.
- March 22, 2027: Final Shutdown. All Firebase Studio services will be deactivated, and any remaining data will be permanently deleted.
Why Pull the Plug?
The decision is a strategic pivot toward “vibe coding” and “agentic development”—two trends that have evolved rapidly since Firebase Studio’s debut.
- Tool Overlap: Firebase Studio occupied an awkward middle ground between a simple prompt-to-app tool and a full-blown IDE. By splitting its features, Google aims to provide a clearer path:
- Google AI Studio: Now features a “rebuilt” experience that auto-provisions Firebase databases and authentication directly from natural language prompts.
- Google Antigravity: A local-first, next-generation IDE designed for high-velocity autonomous workflows.
- Performance Issues: Since its launch, Firebase Studio faced user feedback regarding “high error rates” and “lagging” when handling complex backend logic, leading Google to favor the more robust Antigravity engine.
- Consolidation: Google wants a single, unified “surface” for AI development rather than maintaining multiple competing cloud IDEs.
What is NOT Changing
Google has emphasized that the core Firebase backend services are completely unaffected by this announcement.
- Cloud Firestore, Authentication, App Hosting, and Cloud Functions will continue to operate normally.
- Only the Studio development environment—the browser-based editor—is being retired.
Migration Paths: Where to Go Next
Depending on your workflow, Google recommends two distinct successors:
| If you prefer… | Choose this tool |
| Rapid Prototyping: Building apps from prompts and screenshots in the browser. | Google AI Studio |
| Code-First Development: Full control over your codebase in a local, VS Code-like environment. | Google Antigravity |
| Browser Access: Using low-end hardware or tablets to code. | Google AI Studio (though accessibility concerns remain). |
Action Item: Exporting Your Project
To prevent data loss, developers should use the “Move now” button in their Firebase Studio dashboard or the @fbs-to-agy-export agent in Antigravity. Note that agent chat history is currently not part of the standard zip export and must be manually retrieved from the .idx/ai directory in your workspace.
