Meta quietly — by big-tech standards, anyway — began rolling out group chats in Threads, letting people stitch up to 50 followers into one shared conversation instead of firing the same DM at each friend one by one. The change is small in feature-set but big in intent: Threads is slowly filling out the missing messaging pieces that once made it feel like a feed with no front door to private conversation.
If you already use Threads, the new group-chat flow will look familiar: tap the compose/new message, add people (must be people who follow your Threads account), give the chat a custom name if you want, and you’re off. Meta limits groups to 50 participants — wide enough for friend circles, small teams, hobby groups or event planning, but not meant to replace very large community spaces.
Meta’s product notes and Threads posts make clear there are guardrails: only followers can be added directly, which reduces the ease of creating open invite links to random users (though Meta says link-based invites are coming in a future update). And, like Messenger-style group threads, you can label a conversation so it’s identifiable by topic or group — helpful when your “weekend plans” thread is competing with a “football banter” thread.
The rollout is global in scope, with a notable exception: the UK and Australia are currently excluded from the initial push. Separately, Meta says the full messaging experience — individual DMs and group chats — is being extended to users in the European Union “over the next few days,” closing a gap that had left EU users waiting while Meta worked through regulatory and product readiness questions. Expect the exact timing in those territories to be staggered; Meta has a history of phased releases there.
Why this matters
On the surface, adding group DMs is a convenience play: fewer duplicate messages, easier coordination, less inbox clutter from repeat one-to-one pings. But the feature matters strategically. Threads launched as a text-first space where people could post short takes; adding richer messaging capability nudges it toward being a full social layer — not just a public feed but also a place to hold private, multi-person conversations. That makes the app stickier: if your friend group moves their planning and chatter into Threads, you’ll open the app more often.
For creators and small communities, the 50-person cap lets Threads host meaningful groups — think podcast teams, hobbyist circles, or creator cohorts — without pushing users to separate apps like WhatsApp or Discord. Meta clearly wants Threads to be the place where both public and private conversational life happens.
Product caveats and what’s coming
Meta hasn’t treated this as a finished launch. Alongside group chats, it’s promising better inbox-management tools — things like message requests, spam/hidden folders and filters are on the roadmap — and, importantly, the ability to invite people to group chats with a shared link so you don’t have to add each participant manually. Those creators-and-community-friendly features will shape whether group chats are merely convenient or genuinely useful for larger and more fluid social groups.
One practical point to watch: Threads’ DMs were introduced earlier this year without end-to-end encryption — Meta has framed Threads messaging as a convenient conversation layer, not a secure-communications product. That distinction influences how people will use it: casual coordination and banter are fine, but activists, journalists or others who need private, encrypted comms will still prefer alternatives. (If privacy is your priority, verify the encryption posture before migrating sensitive chats.)
The competitive angle
Adding group DMs positions Threads more directly against other social and messaging apps. It doesn’t unseat WhatsApp, Messenger or Telegram — each has its own feature depth and audience — but it undercuts a common user behaviour: hopping between a public feed for posting and a separate messaging app to actually coordinate. Threads’ advantage is convenience and context: the same place where you see what friends are saying publicly now houses the private conversations about that content. For Meta, that keeps more of the social graph inside its ecosystem.
Group chats on Threads don’t reinvent social networking, but they do make the app more complete. For everyday users, it’s simply more convenient; for Meta, it’s a deliberate step toward making Threads both a public square and a private living room. Expect more incremental moves like this — small features, big signals — as the company nudges Threads from a promising newcomer into a more rounded social product.
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