Meta confirmed Wednesday that it will begin testing two subscription plans for its AI offerings. The cheapest plan, Meta One Plus, will cost $7.99 a month. The premium plan, Meta One Premium, will set you back $19.99 a month. The company will begin testing next month in Singapore, Guatemala, and Bolivia.
The question for the rest of the world is: how long before this comes to you?
What You Get for Your Money
Naomi Gleit, the head of product at Meta, revealed the subscription testing in an Instagram video. The plans, she said, “give people who use Meta AI more to work with, more capacity, bigger, more complex requests, and more room to create for businesses and creators.”
The more expensive $19.99 version offers users additional computing capacity to produce more comprehensive responses and other advanced features. Think of it as the difference between economy and first class. Both get you there. One is faster, roomier, and more powerful.
Meta will continue to provide a free version of the app and site. The company is not slamming the door on non-paying users. But it is making clear that the best features, the fastest responses, and the most advanced tools will now cost money.

“We’re offering premium tools that allow you to enhance presence, supercharge content, automate tasks, and protect your brand,” Gleit said. “We’re also thinking about how to bring this all together in a way that makes sense.”
The Strategic Pivot
Meta has spent years building AI features into its apps — Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp — at no additional cost. The company’s business model has always been advertising. You are the product. Your attention is sold to the highest bidder.
Now, Meta is seeking a revenue stream for the AI era beyond advertisements. That is not a small shift. It is a fundamental rethinking of how the company makes money.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg signaled this move last year. As Meta AI improves, he said, the company could offer “a subscription service so that people can pay to use more compute.” Compute costs money. AI models require massive computing power. Someone has to pay for it. Meta is betting that its most engaged users will foot the bill.
The move also positions Meta to compete more directly with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google Gemini. Those companies already offer subscription tiers. ChatGPT Plus costs $20 a month. Claude Pro costs $20 a month. Gemini Advanced is bundled into Google One. Meta is entering an existing market, not creating a new one.
The Test Markets
Meta chose Singapore, Guatemala, and Bolivia as its testing grounds. Those are not random picks. Singapore is a wealthy, tech-savvy market with high English proficiency. Guatemala and Bolivia are Spanish-speaking markets with growing digital adoption. Meta can test pricing, features, and user behavior in three distinct environments before rolling out globally.
If the tests succeed, expect subscription plans to arrive in the US, Europe, and other major markets within months. If they fail, Meta may tweak the pricing, add features, or rethink the strategy entirely.
For now, American users are safe. The subscription is not coming next month. But the writing is on the wall.
The Free Version Is Not Going Away
Meta is careful to emphasize that a free version will remain. The company is not trying to force everyone to pay. It is trying to convert heavy users into paying customers. The calculus is simple: a small percentage of users generate most of the compute costs. If those users pay, Meta can continue offering the free version to everyone else.
That is the same model used by Spotify, Dropbox, and countless other freemium services. Free is limited. Paid is unlimited. Users who need more pay. Users who are casual stay free.
Whether Meta’s AI features are compelling enough to drive that conversion is the open question.
The Bottom Line
Meta will begin testing two AI subscription plans next month in Singapore, Guatemala, and Bolivia. Meta One Plus costs $7.99 a month. Meta One Premium costs $19.99 a month. The subscriptions offer more capacity, more complex requests, and advanced features for businesses and creators. A free version will remain available.
The move marks Meta’s first attempt to charge users for AI features and represents a new revenue stream beyond advertising. The company is following the path laid out by OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google.
For now, the subscriptions are only tests in three small markets. But if they succeed, the question will come to your country sooner than you think. Are you willing to pay $7.99 a month for better AI? Or will you stick with the free version and watch others get the best features?




