Here’s a novel way to sour the goodwill of hardware owners: charge them to keep using a headline feature they already bought. Meta has quietly introduced a “rate limit” on Conversation Focus, one of the marquee AI tricks baked into its latest smart glasses — and it’s steep enough to feel like a soft paywall.
The gist: Conversation Focus, which uses the glasses’ microphone array to isolate and amplify the voice of whoever you’re talking to, will be capped at three hours of use per month unless you cough up for a $19.99 Meta One Premium subscription. And before you assume premium buys you unlimited chatter, think again — even paying subscribers hit a wall at 15 hours per month.
Meta is careful with its wording. In a help article, the company insists it will never require a subscription to use the glasses at all; the rate limit, it argues, applies only to certain AI features. Technically true. Practically, three hours a month is a strange ceiling for something marketed as an everyday listening aid. Anyone who leans on Conversation Focus in noisy restaurants or crowded rooms will burn through that allowance fast — and the premium tier’s 15 hours isn’t exactly bottomless either.
The context makes it sting a little more. The Meta Adventurer and Meta Fury launched on June 23, 2026 at US$299 apiece, alongside the Kylie Jenner–designed Starfire at US$399. These aren’t throwaway gadgets — they pack a 12-megapixel camera, 3K video capture, a five-microphone array, and eight-hour battery life, with the bundled case topping that up by roughly 40 additional hours. Adjustable nose pads and prescription-lens compatibility round out a genuinely polished piece of eyewear.
Every model also ships with Muse Spark, Meta’s first proprietary AI model built specifically for wearable inference. That on-device intelligence is the whole pitch — glasses that see, hear and process the world around you. So metering one of the flagship AI experiences behind a subscription reads less like technical necessity and more like a business decision testing how far owners can be nudged toward recurring revenue.
The glasses are available now at meta.com, LensCrafters, Sunglasses Hut, Best Buy and Amazon. The question isn’t whether Meta can slap a subscription on AI hardware — plenty of companies are heading that way — but whether buyers who dropped US$299 or more will accept a stopwatch on a feature that helped sell the product in the first place.
It’s a familiar pattern: sell the hardware, then rent back its best abilities. Meta is betting a meaningful slice of owners will pay $19.99 a month rather than count their minutes. Whether that bet pays off — or breeds resentment — is the real experiment here.