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Meta One Subscriptions Launch Into a $145 Billion AI Bet

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Meta flipped on a row of paid subscriptions on May 27, charging from $2.99 to $49.99 a month across Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp, and tucked its premium artificial intelligence plans into a new brand called Meta One. The company’s shares climbed roughly 4% on the day as investors read the move as a credible second revenue engine bolted onto an advertising business that still supplies almost all of Meta’s money.

The cheer skips over the arithmetic. Meta has guided the market to spend between $125 billion and $145 billion on capital projects in 2026, the bulk of it on AI. Even the most generous early estimates put Meta One’s annual revenue at a small slice of that. The launch marks a genuine change in what Meta sells to its users. The capital bill it is meant to help cover sits in a different league.

Seven Paid Tiers From $2.99 to $49.99

Under one umbrella, Meta now sells seven distinct paid plans aimed at three different crowds: everyday users, creators and businesses, and people who lean on Meta AI. The consumer plans carry the “Plus” name and rolled out worldwide. The AI and professional tiers sit under the Meta One label and are still in regional testing.

The feature lists track each app. Instagram Plus leans on creator tools such as aggregate Story rewatch counts, unlimited audience lists and anonymous Story previews. WhatsApp Plus stays in the messaging lane with app themes, custom ringtones and extra pinned chats. The AI tiers split on compute: both give access to Meta AI, but Meta One Premium opens a deeper reasoning “thinking mode” plus heavier video and image generation.

Plan Price / month Aimed at Headline perks
WhatsApp Plus $2.99 All users App themes, custom ringtones, extra pinned chats, premium stickers
Instagram Plus $3.99 All users Story insights, unlimited audience lists, anonymous Story previews
Facebook Plus $3.99 All users Profile customization, Super Reactions, Story insights
Meta One Plus $7.99 Meta AI users Higher compute capacity for queries
Meta One Premium $19.99 Meta AI power users Thinking-mode reasoning, expanded video and image generation
Meta One Essential $14.99 Creators, businesses Verified badge, impersonation protection, link sheet
Meta One Advanced $49.99 Creators, businesses Feed and search priority, bold follow buttons, advanced analytics

One thing the plans do not do is replace Meta Verified, the identity-checked blue badge service Meta launched in 2023. The company said the new Plus tiers sit alongside it. You can find Meta’s full rollout details on its newsroom.

Why Meta Reached for Subscriptions Now

Meta’s problem is not growth. First-quarter revenue hit $56.31 billion, up 33% from a year earlier, and average revenue per person (ARPP, what Meta earns from each user) reached $15.66. The problem is concentration. Close to 95% of that money comes from advertising, which leaves the company exposed every time ad pricing softens or a privacy rule reshapes targeting.

Sitting against that single revenue stream is a spending plan that keeps climbing. In April, Meta raised its 2026 capital expenditure (capex, the cash a company pours into long-term assets like data centers and chips) guidance to $125 billion to $145 billion, up from $115 billion to $135 billion, citing higher component prices and extra data-center costs.

The contract side points the same way. Meta signed an expanded CoreWeave cloud-capacity agreement worth about $21 billion running through December 2032, a commitment that has to be paid whether or not its AI products mint cash. Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s chief executive, has framed the spending as a bet the company cannot afford to underplay, and in recent months tied roughly 8,000 job cuts to funding it.

So the subscription push answers a question investors keep raising on earnings calls: where does the return on all this spending come from? Charging users directly, rather than waiting for AI to lift ad performance, is the most legible answer Meta can offer right now.

The Math Behind the 4% Pop

Strip the announcement down to dollars and the gap is hard to miss.

  • $125B to $145B in 2026 capex Meta has guided to, up from a prior $115B to $135B range.
  • $4B to $12B a year, the range analysts have floated for what Meta One could eventually pull in.
  • $56.31B in first-quarter 2026 revenue, about 95% of it still from advertising.
  • ~4% single-day gain in Meta’s share price after the launch.

The Capex Gap

Take the high end of the analyst range, $12 billion in eventual Meta One revenue, and hold it against a capital budget more than ten times larger. The subscription line would cover well under a tenth of annual spend, and only after years of scaling. At the low end, $4 billion, it reads closer to a rounding adjustment. JPMorgan moved its rating on Meta to neutral over the spending, and the subscription reveal did not change that call.

Why the Pop Outran the Numbers

If the cash is small, why did the stock rise? Because the announcement is as much signal as substance. It tells the market Meta has a plan to monetize AI directly, that it is not betting everything on ads getting smarter, and that management is willing to charge its biggest fans. For a stock dogged by capex anxiety since the spring, a credible second story was worth a single-day bump on its own.

The Llama Versus Muse Spark Question

Meta has not said which model powers a paid Meta One subscription. The choice sits between two very different ideas about what Meta’s AI should be.

One path is a premium version of Llama, the open-weight large language model (LLM, the kind of system behind chatbots) Meta has released to developers for years. The other is Muse Spark, a newer model the company introduced earlier in the year that industry watchers describe as built for multimodal and agentic work, leaning harder into image understanding, voice and vision than Llama did at the start.

The distinction matters for users because the two carry different DNA:

  • Llama grew up open, aimed at developer APIs (application programming interfaces, the hooks other software uses) and enterprise customization.
  • Muse Spark is expected to bind tightly to Meta’s own apps and Ray-Ban smart glasses, enabling real-time scene recognition and context-aware suggestions.
  • The open question is whether Meta keeps Llama open for builders while reserving Muse Spark as the closed, paid engine inside Meta One.

That split would mirror the route OpenAI and Anthropic already took, selling subscription access to their best models while Meta gave its own away. Meta One is the moment Meta stops being the odd one out.

Singapore, Guatemala and Bolivia Go First

The rollout is staged, and where each tier starts says something about what Meta wants to learn. The consumer Plus plans went global immediately because they are low-risk feature upsells. The money question, whether people will pay for AI, gets tested in a much smaller set of markets first.

  1. Consumer Plus (Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp): live worldwide now.
  2. AI tiers (Meta One Plus and Meta One Premium): beta testing from June in Singapore, Guatemala and Bolivia.
  3. Business tiers (Meta One Essential and Advanced): in testing this week in Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Thailand and Bangladesh.

The mix is deliberate. Singapore is a wealthy, English-speaking tech hub; the two Latin American markets are price-sensitive, where $7.99 a month is a real decision. Pricing Meta One Plus at roughly 60% below ChatGPT Plus or Google’s comparable AI plan only matters if enough people in those test markets say yes.

Two Decades of Free Apps Get a Price Tag

For most of its life, Meta sold one thing to make money: your attention, packaged for advertisers, while the apps stayed free. The “It’s free and always will be” line sat under Facebook’s login for years. Meta One quietly retires that posture for anyone who wants the better version.

This is not the first crack. Meta Verified already asked regular users to pay for a badge that used to be reserved for celebrities and influencers. The new Plus tiers extend the logic across every app and every kind of user, from a teenager who wants anonymous Story previews to a small business paying $49.99 for feed priority.

Charging users directly, rather than waiting for AI to lift ad performance, is the most legible answer Meta can offer right now.

The strategic read is straightforward. As user growth flattens, Meta’s average revenue per user history shows ARPP is the lever the company can still pull, and subscriptions push on it directly while giving Meta a more predictable revenue stream than ad auctions. Anthropic and OpenAI proved people will pay monthly for AI; Meta is testing whether its billions of users behave the same way.

That is the test that matters more than the launch-day pop. If enough power users in those first beta markets pay $7.99 or $19.99 a month, Meta One graduates from an investor talking point into a business line worth modeling. If they shrug, Meta is back to selling ads against the largest infrastructure bet in its history, and the early applause will look like the high-water mark.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Meta One?

Meta One is Meta’s umbrella brand for its paid subscriptions, introduced on May 27. It houses the company’s AI plans (Meta One Plus and Meta One Premium) plus professional tiers for creators and businesses (Essential and Advanced). The consumer “Plus” plans for Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp sit beside it.

How much does Meta One cost?

Pricing runs from $2.99 a month for WhatsApp Plus up to $49.99 for Meta One Advanced. The AI plans are $7.99 for Meta One Plus and $19.99 for Meta One Premium, while Instagram Plus and Facebook Plus are $3.99 each and the creator-focused Essential tier is $14.99.

Where can I get the Meta AI subscription?

The AI tiers begin beta testing in June across three markets: Singapore, Guatemala and Bolivia, with wider expansion expected later. The business tiers are being trialed in Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Thailand and Bangladesh, while the consumer Plus plans are already available globally.

Do the Plus plans remove ads?

No. Meta described the consumer Plus tiers around features such as profile customization, Super Reactions and Story insights, not as ad-free plans. They also do not replace Meta Verified, the identity-checked badge service that continues separately.

Will Meta One use Llama or Muse Spark?

Meta has not confirmed it. The paid AI service could run on an enhanced version of the open-weight Llama family or on Muse Spark, the newer multimodal model Meta introduced this year. The company has kept the underlying architecture private for now.

Is Meta AI still free?

Yes. Meta AI remains free for casual users; the Meta One Plus and Premium subscriptions add higher compute capacity, deeper reasoning and expanded media generation for people who hit the limits of the free tier.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. It discusses publicly traded securities and forward-looking business plans that carry risk; share prices and company forecasts can change quickly. Consult a qualified financial professional before making any investment decision. Figures are accurate as of publication on June 1, 2026.

Logan Pierce is a writer and web publisher with over seven years of experience covering consumer technology. He has published work on independent tech blogs and freelance bylines covering Android devices, privacy focused software, and budget gadgets. Logan founded Oton Technology to publish clear, no nonsense tech news and reviews based on real hands on testing. He has personally tested and reviewed dozens of mid range and budget Android phones, written extensively about app privacy, and built and managed multiple WordPress publications over the past decade. Logan holds a bachelor's degree in English and studied digital marketing at a certificate level.

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