Apple will no longer include a Lightning-to-3.5mm headphone jack adapter with new iPhone purchases.

The removal of the headphone dongle listing on Apple’s iPhone product pages was first spotted by The Verge . A quick look through the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine appears to confirm the change. Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The change looks like it will apply to the three new iPhone models launched on Wednesday—the iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR—as well as the older iPhone 8 and iPhone 7.

Apple removed the iPhone SE and iPhone 6S—along with last year’s iPhone X—from its website after its launch event in Cupertino, California, on Wednesday, seemingly discontinuing the last Apple phones with built-in 3.5mm headphone jacks from its lineup.

Apple is still selling the headphone adapter on its website for its usual $9. The newest iPhones range from $749 outright for the entry-level iPhone XR, which comes with an LCD display and less advanced camera system, to $1,449 outright for an iPhone XS Max with 512GB of built-in storage. (Per usual, however, Apple and mobile carriers will make the phones available on monthly installment plans that lessen the upfront cost.) Those devices will continue to come with a pair of Lightning-based earphones in the box, according to their respective product pages on Apple's website.

Apple first omitted the headphone jack from iPhones with the launch of the iPhone 7 in late 2016, pushing wireless audio as an ultimately superior alternative and citing the need for additional internal space within its devices. That same day, Apple launched its totally wireless AirPods earphones , which cost $159 and have become something of a sales success, in part due to their tight integration with iOS devices.

Several other major smartphone manufacturers have removed the headphone jack in the years since. (Others, like Essential, did so beforehand). The trend has been criticized by some smartphone users during that time, but in Apple’s case, the move hasn’t had a significant effect on sales. Apple has repeatedly posted strong quarterly iPhone revenues, largely due to a higher average selling price, and the company recently reached a market value of $1 trillion.

Making the headphone adapter a mandatory purchase for those who still wish to use their traditional headphones will likely push those figures up higher: a recent report from Ceros said that the dongle has been one of the two highest-selling Apple products sold at Best Buy since it became available.