

Xiaomi has updated the end-of-support list on its Security Center website, and the latest change adds the Redmi K60 and Redmi K60E. According to the company’s current notice, both devices will stop receiving software or firmware updates, including future Xiaomi security updates. Xiaomi also says it may no longer respond to newly reported security vulnerabilities affecting those models.
The update appears in Xiaomi’s smartphone and tablet support section, where the company tracks products that have moved beyond their standard maintenance window. For owners of the Redmi K60 and Redmi K60E, the practical meaning is straightforward: regular patching is ending, and official long-term protection will now be much more limited.
Xiaomi says it aims to provide ongoing security maintenance across Xiaomi, REDMI, and POCO branded phones and tablets whenever possible. The company describes its security support package as covering the latest patches, security issue fixes, and other security-related improvements designed to keep supported products safer over time.
It also explains that, under normal circumstances, most products receive at least two years of security updates. Xiaomi adds that the actual support window can vary from model to model, and that some devices may receive three years or more depending on their positioning and maintenance policy.
The company further notes that the scope of security servicing does not only apply to the core operating system. It may also cover hardware firmware, preinstalled software, software needed for essential device functions, and external control software linked to the product.
At the same time, Xiaomi leaves a small exception open for unusually serious cases. Even if a device has already reached the end of official support, the company says it may still provide a necessary fix if an especially severe vulnerability is discovered later on. That isn’t the same as ongoing support, though, and users shouldn’t treat it as a promise of normal update coverage.
For current users, this shift is mostly a reminder that older devices eventually age out of the vendor maintenance cycle. Anyone still using a Redmi K60 or Redmi K60E as a main phone may want to pay closer attention to app security, account protection, and future upgrade timing now that routine Xiaomi security updates are no longer expected for these models.