Meta makes about $195 billion a year selling ads against your scrolling. Now it wants you to pay too.
The company just rolled out paid versions of Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp globally - the first broad consumer subscription for its main apps, going beyond the creator-focused Meta Verified it launched in 2023.
What Subscribers Get
Instagram Plus and Facebook Plus run $3.99 a month, while WhatsApp Plus is $2.99.
Subscribers get extras like profile customization, story insights, super-reaction animations, and the ability to post without spamming followers' feeds. WhatsApp Plus takes a different angle with custom themes, ringtones, premium stickers, and extra pinned chats.
Nothing in the bundle is must-have. Think of it less like upgrading to first class and more like paying to skip the line at a free museum.
Meta's existing verification product, Meta Verified, isn't going away - the new Plus tiers sit alongside it.
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The Bigger Plan: Meta One
The consumer plans are just the opening act, with Meta testing a new umbrella brand called Meta One to house every future subscription.
For Meta AI users, two tiers are coming next month: Meta One Plus at $7.99 a month and Meta One Premium at $19.99. The Premium tier unlocks deeper reasoning, more video and image generation, and heavier compute - the same playbook OpenAI and Anthropic have been running for years.
For creators and businesses, the pricing jumps fast - Meta One Essential at $14.99 a month and Meta One Advanced at $49.99.
The Advanced tier promises higher placement in search results, a bold Follow button on Reels, auto-invites to followers, and deeper analytics on competitors. Basically, you're paying Meta to help you stand out on Meta.
The AI plans start testing in Singapore, Guatemala, and Bolivia, while the creator and business plans roll out in Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Thailand, and Bangladesh.
Why Meta Is Doing This Now
Meta's main apps already have billions of users, leaving few people left to add. Future growth has to come from squeezing more money out of the audience they already have.
Ads have been Meta's only real lever for that. Charging users directly gives the company a second one - one that doesn't depend on the ad market, doesn't care about iOS privacy changes, and doesn't get cut when the economy slows.
Subscription revenue is also the kind of recurring, steady income Wall Street pays a premium for.
The pricing tells the real story: $2.99 buys WhatsApp stickers, while $49.99 buys business tools. Meta knows where the real money is, and it's not with casual users.
What To Watch
The consumer tiers probably won't move the needle on Meta's earnings any time soon. A few dollars a month from a small slice of users is a rounding error against nearly $200 billion in ad revenue.
The AI and business tiers are the ones to track. Those have real pricing power, recurring revenue, and a path to scale - especially if Meta keeps bundling more tools under the Meta One brand.
If those plans get traction in the test markets, expect a wider rollout fast.
Meta spent two decades building the audience. Now it's testing how much that audience will pay.
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