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Meta launches ad free subscriptions for Facebook and Instagram in the UK

UK users of Facebook and Instagram can now choose between personalised advertising or a low cost monthly subscription for an ad free experience across their accounts.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Sep 29, 2025, 2:45 AM EDT
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Meta is about to give UK users a straight-forward — if somewhat stark — choice: keep using Facebook and Instagram for free and let the company personalise ads using your data, or pay a small monthly fee to remove those personalised ads altogether. The new option, announced by Meta, will roll out in the coming weeks and is being touted as a response to recent UK regulatory guidance on “consent or pay” advertising models.

If you live in the UK and are over 18, Meta says you’ll be able to subscribe to an ad-free experience for £2.99 per month on the web, or £3.99 per month if you sign up within Meta’s iOS or Android apps. Meta points to the cut taken by Apple and Google in their app stores as the reason the in-app price is higher.

If your Instagram or Facebook lives are tied together — through Meta’s Accounts Center, which links accounts across the company’s services — any additional account you add will automatically be eligible for its own subscription at a discounted add-on rate: roughly £2 extra per month on the web or £3 via mobile. In other words, one subscription covers one primary account; linked accounts cost a bit extra.

The regulatory backdrop: ICO’s guidance vs. EU pushback

This isn’t happening in a vacuum. The UK Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) published guidance earlier this year on “consent or pay” models — a framework meant to ensure that if firms offer people the chance to pay instead of giving consent to data processing, that choice must be genuine, fair and properly explained. The ICO has welcomed Meta’s move and said Meta lowered the starting price after discussions with regulators, putting the UK price point at about half what Meta initially offered EU users.

That last part is key: in the EU, the whole idea ran into trouble. Regulators there argued Meta’s earlier “consent or pay” setup didn’t give consumers a true, equivalent alternative that used less data. The European Commission found the approach incompatible with parts of the Digital Markets Act and hit Meta with a €200 million fine earlier this year. The fines and legal friction in Brussels ultimately forced Meta to revise its EU offers — and provide important context for its UK strategy.

Why Meta is doing this — and what it means for the bottom line

It’s plain to anyone who follows big-tech numbers: advertising is the engine that runs Meta. Recent reporting shows digital ads make up the vast majority of Meta’s revenue, and even a small decline in ad effectiveness or uptake can translate into a meaningful impact on the company’s top line. Offering a paid, ad-free tier lets Meta comply with regulator demands for user choice while keeping the core ad product intact for the majority who prefer “free.”

For users, the trade is simple: pay a few quid and you won’t be shown personalised ads; don’t pay and you’ll continue to see advertisements targeted using data about your activity. Meta says people who don’t take the paid option will still be able to use Ad Preferences tools to influence the kinds of ads they see.

Who benefits — and who will complain

Advertisers get something here, too: Meta has said personalised advertising provides higher ROI for businesses, so preserving that model for non-subscribers keeps the ad marketplace functional. Regulators — at least the ICO — have signalled this could be an acceptable compromise so long as the choice is real, the fees are fair and consent remains freely given.

Critics have several obvious gripes. Privacy advocates dislike the premise of “pay to avoid tracking” on principle: it can feel like a penalty for people who value privacy but can’t or won’t pay. EU regulators have already argued that an equivalent, low-data experience must be available without forcing users into a binary pay/consent decision — a point that led to the EC’s €200m enforcement action. Expect those debates to continue, especially if Meta’s UK rollout is seen as sidestepping the spirit of wider European rules.

The small print you’ll want to check

Meta’s blog post and accompanying FAQ say the subscription won’t show personalised ads and will apply to accounts included in the Accounts Center. The company is explicit that the mobile price is higher because of app store fees — and that the subscription mechanics will vary between web and app stores. As always with subscription models, the devil is in the details: who counts as a linked account, how family/shared devices are handled, whether local VAT applies, and how cancellations/refunds work. Read the terms before you tap “subscribe.”

Why this matters beyond Meta

This rollout is a test case for how big platforms navigate the knot of privacy, consumer choice and ad-funded business models. If the UK accepts a lower-priced pay option without further legal entanglement, other markets could follow. If regulators push back or consumer uptake is negligible, platforms will have to keep juggling ad formats, data minimisation and subscription products in a rapidly changing regulatory landscape.


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