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AppsMetaTechWhatsApp

WhatsApp ads coming worldwide—but not to Europe until 2026

Meta is delaying WhatsApp’s advertising launch in Europe until 2026 as regulators review its plans to link user data across platforms like Facebook and Instagram.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
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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Jun 20, 2025, 5:00 AM EDT
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WhatsApp app icon logo showing on smartphone screen.
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The tension between Big Tech’s monetization ambitions and Europe’s robust privacy guardrails, WhatsApp has informed regulators that its planned advertising model won’t land in the EU until sometime in 2026. This delay comes as part of a broader rollout of new features—targeted ads in the “Updates” tab and a subscription model—that Meta says will appear globally “over the next several months,” but which have immediately drawn scrutiny from privacy advocates and EU authorities.

For years, WhatsApp prided itself on an ad-free experience, a stance championed by founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton when the app launched on a nominal $1-per-year model and then pivoted to free usage without ads in 2016. That promise held until June 16, 2025, when Meta announced that it would introduce ads into the Updates (or “Status”) tab—a section akin to Instagram Stories where users share ephemeral posts—and roll out subscription options for channels and exclusive content. Meta has framed these changes as a way to help users “discover more businesses and channels,” while emphasizing that personal chats remain end-to-end encrypted and won’t display advertisements.

Behind the scenes, however, the introduction of targeted ads marks a departure from earlier assurances. Meta plans to leverage minimal personal signals—such as location, language settings, and interactions with channels or ads—to tailor what appears in users’ Updates feeds. Moreover, if users opt into linking their WhatsApp accounts with Facebook and Instagram via Meta’s Accounts Center, ad preferences and data from those platforms could further refine targeting. This element has heightened privacy concerns, given Europe’s stringent General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requirements regarding consent and data sharing.

The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC), which serves as the lead EU regulator for Meta services under the GDPR, was quick to respond. Speaking to reporters on June 19, 2025, Commissioner Des Hogan confirmed that WhatsApp has notified the DPC that its new advertising model won’t launch in the EU until at least 2026. “That new product won’t be launching [in] the EU market until 2026. We have been informed by WhatsApp and we will be meeting with them to discuss any issues further,” Hogan stated. He added that the DPC will collaborate with other EU data protection authorities to “reflect back any concerns which we have as European regulators.”

This postponement is not framed as a favor to European users, but rather as a pragmatic step for Meta to allow regulators time to scrutinize the plan’s compliance with GDPR. EU authorities have previously intervened in Meta’s products: the company paused certain AI features in the region due to privacy concerns, and WhatsApp itself has been fined heavily in the past (e.g., a €225 million penalty by the Irish regulator in 2021 over transparency issues). The DPC’s proactive engagement signals that any attempt to deploy cross-platform data-sharing mechanisms will receive rigorous examination.

For everyday users, the prospect of seeing ads in Updates may feel benign compared to an intruding ad in private chats. But privacy specialists caution that the downstream effect—aggregating behavioral signals from multiple Meta services—could sharpen ad profiles in ways that contradict WhatsApp’s original privacy promises. Europe’s digital landscape has already seen migration to privacy-focused alternatives like Signal and Telegram in response to perceived overreach by Meta. The EU’s broader regulatory environment, including the Digital Services Act (DSA) and forthcoming Digital Markets Act (DMA), further arms authorities with tools to check large platforms.

Meta maintains that the new features are “built in the most privacy-oriented way possible,” emphasizing that ads will only appear in the Updates tab and that cross-platform data-sharing occurs only when users explicitly opt in. A WhatsApp spokesperson reiterated that the ad rollout is a “global update, and it is being rolled out gradually around the world.” Meanwhile, Commissioner Dale Sunderland of the Irish DPC noted they have “not had that sort of conversation” in depth yet, saying “we’re still early days, we’ll engage as we do with every other new feature… and at this stage, it’s too early to say what, if any, will be any red line issues.”

In practice, Meta will likely engage in detailed discussions with the DPC and other EU regulators over the coming months. These talks will examine whether the proposed mechanisms for targeting comply with GDPR’s high bar for consent, data minimization, and transparency. If regulators identify issues, Meta may need to adjust the feature (e.g., limiting certain signals or offering clear opt-out pathways) or delay the rollout further. Past precedents suggest that Europe’s scrutiny can lead to substantive changes: previous AI features and cross-border data transfers have been remodeled after regulatory pushback.

For EU users, nothing will change in their WhatsApp experience until at least 2026, but vigilance is warranted.

Globally, users outside Europe will start seeing ads in the Updates tab before EU deployment. Although Meta says personal chats remain ad-free, the subtle nudging toward business channels, paid subscriptions, and promoted content signals a new era for WhatsApp’s role as a platform, not just a messaging tool. Observers should monitor user feedback and any emerging backlash, as widespread discontent could influence Meta’s ultimate approach in Europe.


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