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Meta to Offer Ad-Free Facebook, Instagram Subscriptions in Europe Plans cost €9.99 per month on the web, €12.99 on mobile The model follows increasing EU regulations on data access

 


Meta is launching a paid subscription that will remove ads from Facebook and Instagram. The service is available throughout the European Union and will be offered for around €9.99 per month on the web or €12.99/month on iOS and Android to account for those platforms’ additional fees.

The subscription is meant to address concerns by the European Union around Meta’s ad targeting and data collection practices. By making users choose between paying for the service to remove ad targeting or using the service for free but consenting to its data collection practices, Meta believes it will have more clearly and definitively met requirements under a collection of European data laws, including the Digital Markets Act and GDPR.

“We respect the spirit and purpose of these evolving European regulations, and are committed to complying with them,” Meta writes in a blog post announcing the new subscription.

Meta says it will continue to offer free access to its products for people who do not wish to pay. The company says the experience for nonpaying users will not change and its existing ad preference tools will remain available.

The ad-free subscription will only be available to people 18 and older in the EU, EEA, and Switzerland. It will apply across all linked Facebook and Instagram accounts, but Meta will eventually charge extra for linked accounts. Starting March 1st, 2024, there will be an additional fee of €6 on the web or €8 on iOS and Android per linked account. The company says that as long as someone remains subscribed, their data will not be used for ad targeting.

The tone of Meta’s announcement makes it clear that the company is still prioritizing the ad-supported business that its platforms are built upon. The service is only being launched in areas with strict protections on consumer data usage, and even then it will only be an optional purchase. The company writes in its blog post that it “believes in an ad-supported internet” and frames the new subscription exclusively as a product derived to meet European regulations.

Still, it’s a product that many have been asking for. Facebook’s products track you across the internet and then target ads based on your behavior. Now we’ll see how many people are really willing to pay to escape the gaze — and the nuisance of nonstop ads in their Instagram feed.

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