# Meta slaps a premium subscription on an existing smart glasses feature

> Source: <https://9to5google.com/2026/07/01/meta-glasses-get-premium-usage-limits/>
> Published: 2026-07-01 15:06:42+00:00

Meta will charge glasses users $20/month for a new Meta One Premium subscription, and one of the first features to get locked down is “Conversation Focus.”

Meta One Premium is a new plan announced by the company in May. It’s part of a wider subscription rollout that places the offer of better features for your socials and products right in front of you. In reality, it seems to make the platforms and products that were once free a little more inaccessible.

The Meta One Premium plan officially affects those who wear Meta’s smart glasses – display or not. An updated help article from [Meta’s website](https://www.meta.com/help/ai-glasses/1384571770097740/) details the premium tiers feature list, and it now states that Conversation Focus is extended for subscribers (via [ The Verge](https://www.theverge.com/gadgets/959899/meta-ai-glasses-paywall-rate-limit)).

Meta One is a paid subscription that adds extra features across different eligible Meta technologies, including Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp, and more access to AI features on Meta AI and AI glasses. Meta One offers multiple plan options with different pricing and benefits.

The Meta One Premium plan unlocks expanded access to features like conversation focus and provides access to premium device support for your AI glasses.

Without the plan, that feature is limited to just 3 hours of usage a month. If you pay the $20/month premium subscription fee, you still won’t be allowed to use Meta’s glasses feature without limits. The communication aid will only work for 15 hours and reset the next month, much like modern AI plans.

Conversation Focus doesn’t seem to run server-side, according to *The Verge*. It takes audio from people in your area and amplifies their voice, making them a little clearer in certain environments. It can also be an accessibility feature for those who might be hearing impaired. But it does all of that using hardware located on the glasses, not through a cloud connection. Meta notes it uses beam-forming mics and advanced processing with onboard hardware.

Since the feature runs fully on-device, it makes no sense for Meta to impose usage limits on the feature and lock extended runtime behind a premium Meta AI subscription. At that point, it’s part of the purchased device and not something that would warrant upkeep costs.

Meta has not commented on the new premium usage limits for the glasses feature. This comes as the company was recently discovered [shipping facial recognition capabilities](https://9to5google.com/2026/06/05/meta-ray-ban-glasses-may-soon-recognize-faces/) in its glasses while noting it did not have plans to implement that function.

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