Meta's Smart Glasses Now Come With a Subscription Catch, and Rivals Are Circling Meta now requires the Meta One Premium Plan to fully use features like Conversation Focus on its Ray-Ban, Oakley and Meta-branded smart glasses, a shift experts see as an early sign of how AI hardware makers will monetize devices sold near cost. Meta has begun gating some of the more useful features on its smart glasses behind a paid subscription, offering an early look at how the AI hardware industry plans to make money once devices themselves are sold close to cost. The shift touches every current line of Meta's smart glasses and could become a template other gadget makers follow as AI features move from novelty to necessity. What changes for glasses owners Meta's help pages now spell out that owners of its Ray-Ban, Oakley, and Meta-branded smart glasses will need the Meta One Premium Plan to unlock expanded access to certain features. The glasses will still work without paying anything, but some capabilities will be capped for free users, with the option to subscribe if they want more. Conversation Focus and its limits The clearest example is a feature called Conversation Focus. It boosts the audio of the person you are talking to, making it easier to hear them in noisy settings. Without paying anything, users get three hours of Conversation Focus per month. Subscribers can use it more often, but even paying customers are capped at 15 hours a month. Subscribing to the Meta One Premium Plan also unlocks what Meta calls Premium Device Support, which gives users faster access to human experts trained on the glasses' features whenever something goes wrong. Meta's explanation A Meta spokesperson described this as not an AI rate limit. That distinction matters because rate limits are common across AI platforms, where users get free access to a feature until they hit a monthly cap and then must subscribe to keep using it until the limit resets. Conversation Focus, however, runs entirely on the device itself rather than routing through Meta's servers for AI processing. There is no way to check in real time how many hours of Conversation Focus have been used, though users get a notification as they near the limit. "The subscription supports that ongoing work and gives power users expanded access along with premium device support," the spokesperson said. "We're going to start testing new optional subscription plans that offer more premium features and advanced capabilities for those who want to unlock more from our apps and AI glasses." That suggests more features could get the same treatment as the glasses evolve. Meta says the vast majority of people use Conversation Focus without ever hitting the monthly limit, based on data from its early access program, and the company says it will adjust usage allowances based on feedback. Why an expert doesn't buy the AI cost argument Chris Harrison, director of the Future Interfaces Group at Carnegie Mellon University, doesn't think the subscription exists to help Meta cover its AI spending. "The industry has made tremendous strides, even in the last six months, but certainly in the last 18 months, improving token generation efficiency, running these models much more efficiently," Harrison said. "It's not about recovering AI costs; it's about monetizing customers." As adoption of the glasses grows, Harrison said, the subscription is a way of extracting value from the platform. Meta typically sells its glasses at cost, including the new $299 Meta-branded glasses that drop the Ray-Ban name in exchange for an even lower price. According to Harrison, pricing the hardware this way helps get glasses out into the world and grows the user base, after which the subscription service becomes the actual revenue driver rather than the hardware sale itself. Google, Apple and the industry's subscription drift The risk for Meta in building subscription tiers is that a rival could offer the same, or most of the same, features for free. One such rival is close behind: Google is set to launch its own smart glasses later this year, developed with Samsung and eyewear brands Warby Parker and Gentle Monster. Pricing details and whether there will be a subscription tier haven't been disclosed. Harrison notes that Google has demonstrated significant efficiency gains in running its AI models, which could put it in a better position to absorb costs rather than lock features behind pricing tiers. That doesn't mean Google has no usage limits elsewhere. On Pixel phones, a specific tier of the Google One subscription is required to use Video Boost, which sends video footage to Google's cloud servers to improve lighting, color, stabilization, and noise reduction. Google's Gemini chatbot itself is free, but certain features, such as Gemini Spark, require a subscription. The new Google Home Speaker requires a Google Home Premium subscription to access the more conversational Gemini Live experience. Apple, also rumored to be developing smart glasses, isn't immune to usage limits either. Heavy use of the new AI photo editing features arriving in iOS 27 will require subscribing to a higher iCloud+ tier to keep using them. Will people pay for it? "All of these will have to deliver value, or people will pick the free version," Harrison said. Meta appears to be betting that features like Conversation Focus provide real value, particularly for people with hearing impairments, for whom the feature could meaningfully improve quality of life. Asked whether that is worth $10 a month, Harrison said, "Probably." What this means for you • For smart glasses buyers: If you own or plan to buy Ray-Ban, Oakley or Meta-branded AI glasses, features like Conversation Focus are capped at three hours a month for free users and 15 hours even for subscribers, so factor a possible $10-a-month extra cost into your buying decision. Questions & Answers 1. What is the Meta One Premium Plan? It's Meta's paid subscription that unlocks expanded access to features like Conversation Focus and Premium Device Support on its Ray-Ban, Oakley and Meta-branded smart glasses. 2. How many free hours of Conversation Focus do users get? Free users get three hours of Conversation Focus per month, and even subscribers are capped at 15 hours a month. 3. Does the subscription apply to all of Meta's smart glasses? Yes, it applies across the Ray-Ban, Oakley and Meta-branded versions of Meta's smart glasses. 4. Why does Meta say this isn't an AI rate limit? Because Conversation Focus runs entirely on the device instead of through Meta's servers, so Meta says it isn't limiting AI processing costs the way typical rate limits do. 5. Is Google launching its own smart glasses? Yes, Google is set to launch its own smart glasses later this year, developed with Samsung and eyewear brands Warby Parker and Gentle Monster, though pricing and subscription details haven't been disclosed. 6. Do Google and Apple have similar usage limits? Yes, Google requires Google One or Google Home Premium tiers for features like Video Boost and Gemini Live, and Apple will require a higher iCloud+ tier for heavy use of the new AI photo-editing features in iOS 27. 7. How much do the new Meta-branded smart glasses cost? The new Meta-branded glasses, which drop the Ray-Ban branding, are priced at $299. 8. What does Premium Device Support include? It gives subscribers faster access to Meta's human experts who are trained on the smart glasses' features whenever a problem comes up. https://trendkia.com/en/ai/meta-ke-smarta-glaseza-aba-sabsakripshana-ke-satha-a-rahe-hain-pratidvndvi-bhi-isa-para-nazara-garae-hain-4103 TrendKia — Har trend, sabse pehle.