Perl 5.36 · Version Status

Perl 5.36 End of Life Date

Perl 5.36 end-of-life date, support status, and CVE risk. Data from endoflife.date and official vendor documentation.

Perl 5.36 is past end of life. This version no longer receives security patches. 347 days past EOL — migrate to a supported version immediately.
EOL Date
May 27, 2025
347 days past EOL
Latest Release
5.36.3
Standard release
Release Date
May 27, 2022
Perl 5.36 series
← Perl 5.34 All Perl versions Perl 5.38 →
Recommended upgrade path
Perl 5.42
Latest release: 5.42.2 · EOL: Jul 3, 2028
View full Perl timeline →
All Perl Versions
VersionLatestEOL DateStatus
5.26 5.26.3 May 30, 2020 EOL
5.28 5.28.3 Jun 23, 2021 EOL
5.30 5.30.3 May 22, 2022 EOL
5.32 5.32.1 Jun 20, 2023 EOL
5.34 5.34.3 May 20, 2024 EOL
5.36 5.36.3 May 27, 2025 EOL
5.38 5.38.5 Jul 2, 2026 Warning
5.40 5.40.4 Jun 9, 2027 Active

What does Perl 5.36 end of life mean?

When Perl 5.36 reaches end of life, the maintainers stop issuing security patches for this version. CVEs discovered after the EOL date are publicly disclosed on the National Vulnerability Database with no patch available. Exploit code frequently appears on GitHub within days of disclosure.

The CVE blind spot: Most vulnerability scanners check for known CVEs but do not flag the ongoing accumulation of unpatched vulnerabilities in EOL software versions. Running Perl 5.36 past its EOL date creates a permanently growing attack surface that standard security tooling will not surface.

Migrate to Perl 5.42 or implement compensating controls — network segmentation, enhanced monitoring, restricted access — while migration is underway.

Frequently Asked Questions
When does Perl 5.36 reach end of life?
Perl 5.36 reached end of life on May 27, 2025. This version is no longer receiving security patches.
Is Perl 5.36 still supported?
No. Perl 5.36 reached end of life on May 27, 2025 and is no longer receiving security patches.
What should I upgrade to from Perl 5.36?
The recommended upgrade from Perl 5.36 is Perl 5.42 — the latest actively supported version. Check the Perl full timeline for all supported versions.
What are the security risks of running Perl 5.36 past EOL?
When Perl 5.36 reaches end of life, the maintainers stop issuing security patches. Any CVEs disclosed after the EOL date accumulate with no remediation path. Most vulnerability scanners do not flag this — it is the CVE blind spot. Organizations running EOL Perl should migrate immediately or implement compensating controls.
Data from endoflife.date API · Generated at build time · How we source data →