Complete end-of-life dates, support windows, and security status for all Jquery Ui versions. Data sourced from endoflife.date and official vendor documentation. Updated at every deploy.
| Version | Latest Release | Release Date | EOL Date | Days | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.7 | 1.7.3 | Mar 3, 2009 | Mar 23, 2010 | 5891 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.8 | 1.8.24 | Mar 18, 2010 | Oct 8, 2012 | 4961 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.9 | 1.9.2 | Oct 5, 2012 | Jan 17, 2013 | 4860 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.10 | 1.10.4 | Jan 17, 2013 | Jun 26, 2014 | 4335 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.11 | 1.11.4 | Jun 26, 2014 | Apr 21, 2016 | 3670 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.12 | 1.12.1 | Apr 21, 2016 | Oct 7, 2021 | 1675 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.13 | 1.13.3 | Oct 7, 2021 | Aug 5, 2024 | 642 days past EOL | EOL |
| 1.14 | 1.14.2 | Aug 5, 2024 | Already EOL | Supported | Active |
When a Jquery Ui version reaches end of life, the maintainers stop issuing security patches. Vulnerabilities discovered after this date are publicly disclosed on the National Vulnerability Database, exploit code appears on GitHub, and your systems remain permanently exposed.
The CVE blind spot: Most vulnerability scanners check for known CVEs but do not flag the accumulation of unpatched vulnerabilities in EOL software. With a zero-day, nobody knows about the vulnerability. With EOL software, the vulnerability is public — listed, rated, and often weaponized — but no patch will ever exist. This is the most dangerous gap in enterprise security posture.
Organizations running EOL Jquery Ui should treat it as a vulnerability class in their risk register, apply compensating controls (network segmentation, enhanced monitoring, access restriction), and prioritize migration to a supported version.
Upload requirements.txt, package.json, or Gemfile — full EOL report instantly.
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