In this issue, Ballin etal. report on their analysis of the substrate repertoire of SPPL2a and b intramembrane proteases. Based on the previous studies of their closest homologues, SPPL2c, SPPL3 and SPP, the authors hypothesized that SPPL2a/b proteases may cleave a subset of SNARE proteins. Indeed, four R-SNARE proteins, VAMP1, 2, 3 and 4, were cleaved by SPPL2a/b, both in overexpression assays and at endogenous levels. These findings have been validated by analysis of SPPL2a/b double knock-out mice tissues, which implicates these proteases in the regulation of SNARE protein turnover invivo. The study of Ballin etal. also provides material for future studies of factors determining substrate specificity of SPPLs, as they cleave different subsets of the tail-anchored SNARE proteins. Comment on: https://doi.org/10.1111/febs.16610.