Meta’s artificial intelligence assistant has reached 1 billion monthly active users across its ecosystem of apps, CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed at the company’s annual shareholder meeting this week. The figure includes users across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger — all of which now have the generative AI tool embedded in various ways — as well as on Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses and Quest headsets.
Zuckerberg framed the milestone as a step toward building Meta AI into a leading “personal AI,” with plans to deepen its functionality around voice interactions, personalization, and entertainment. While he didn’t offer specifics on how many users are engaging meaningfully with the assistant versus simply encountering it by default, Meta’s broader AI push is clearly foundational to its future roadmap — and eventual monetization strategy.
Chief Financial Officer Susan Li offered a bit more insight, noting that AI usage is growing most rapidly on WhatsApp. There, users can directly chat with Meta AI, ask questions, and generate images. Still, the company stopped short of clarifying what portion of the billion-user figure reflects consistent engagement or deliberate use, as opposed to incidental interactions baked into daily app activity.
Zuckerberg also reiterated Meta’s longer-term goals for the assistant, which include introducing ads and product recommendations within AI responses, and possibly launching a paid tier that offers increased computing power or exclusive features. That vision mirrors other moves in the AI space, where companies are increasingly treating chatbots and assistants as new fronts for engagement, advertising, and premium services.
Meta launched a standalone Meta AI app in April, but the assistant’s primary reach remains tightly integrated into its existing platforms. As a result, many users may not even realize when they’re interacting with Meta AI — a design choice that boosts its adoption numbers, but complicates the question of how useful or welcome it actually is.
With AI now one of Meta’s central investments, and with usage surging on platforms like WhatsApp, the company appears poised to scale its assistant further — even as questions linger about user intent, utility, and future monetization tactics.
