bbieron@platformeconomyinsights.com

Meta Bringing Ad-Free Facebook and Instagram Subscriptions of the UK

Oct 1, 2025

Report from The Times

In Brief – Meta has announced that it will offer ad-free versions of Facebook and Instagram by subscription in Great Britain. The move follows settlement of a privacy lawsuit brought by digital accountability advocate Tanya O’Connell and discussions with the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), the country’s privacy and data security regulator. The company settled the litigation and began plans for an ad-free subscription following the ICO’s adopting a policy on online tracking and targeted ads that supported the legal arguments behind Ms. O’Connell’s suit. Meta’s UK subscriptions will be priced at £2.99 per month when bought on the web and £3.99 per month when bought on iOS and Android devices. Users with multiple accounts will be able to add extra ones for £1 per month less. Data privacy campaigners who oppose targeted ads expressed opposition to Meta’s plan because the company is not simply offering users the choice of ads that are not personalized.

Context – Meta is the digital company that has been most willing to forcefully defend personalized advertising as being more efficient and valuable than traditional ads for small businesses with small ad budgets, and also for consumers, who receive ads for goods and services they are more likely interested in. That has put the company in the crosshairs of anti-advertising activists, especially in the EU. Meta proposed ad-free paid subscriptions in the EU in response to GDPR litigation, basing the plan on a prior opinion of the European Court of Justice. Opponents argued that a binary choice was unfair. The European Commission then ruled that the Digital Markets Act (DMA) requires Meta to offer a third option, a free version with ads that are not individually targeted. The company appealed the ruling and argues that it unfairly renders their ad network far less effective and valuable. An Austrian court has applied a similar policy beyond Meta and DMA “gatekeepers”, ruling that Der Spiegel violated the GDPR when it offered its website users the binary option of an ad-free subscription for €9.90 per month or a free version that with targeted ads.

View By Monthly
Latest Blog
Major Brazilian Law to Protect Teens on Social Media Goes into Effect

Report from AP News In Brief – A Brazilian law enacted last September to shield minors from harmful online content has taken effect with experts calling it a milestone in the protection of children and adolescents. The Digital Statute of Children and Adolescents does...

European Commission Expands Their DSA Probe of Online Porn Sites

Report from CBC News In Brief – The European Commission has announced that they have preliminarily found four large adult content platforms to be in breach of the Digital Services Act (DSA) for failing to protect minors from being exposed to pornographic content on...

UK Government Targeting Manosphere Content on Online Platforms

Report from The Guardian In Brief – More than 60 Labour MPs have urged Ofcom, the country’s communications and digital regulator, to use its authority under the Online Safety Act to press platforms to better protect young men from risks they argue are linked to...

Google Proposes a Publisher Opt-Out for AI-Enabled Search in the UK

Report from MediaPost In Brief – Google has outlined plans to give publishers more authority over how their content appears in AI-driven search features in response to the consultation by the UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) regarding application of the...

Platform Economy Insights produces a short email four times a week that reviews two top stories with concise analysis. It is the best way to keep on top of the news you should know. Sign up for this free email here.

* indicates required