What you need to know
- Meta puts a paywall on Conversation Focus, limiting free users to just three hours a month unless they subscribe to Meta One Premium for $20 a month.
- This feature works entirely on smart glasses, meaning it works offline and doesn’t rely on Meta cloud servers.
- Premium subscribers earn up to 15 hours per month, but unused hours do not roll over.
Meta is officially ushering in the era of in-your-face hardware subscriptions. The company limits the use of Conversation Focus on Meta smart glasses to three hours per month.
That means if you need more time to listen to the person sitting across from you, you’ll have to cough up $20 a month for the Meta One Premium plan, according to Meta’s updated version. help page (via The Verge). Conversation Focus, which It was commissioned in December 2025allows you to reduce background noise while making the person you’re talking to sound a little more vivid. It’s useful in crowded environments, whether you’re in a busier cafe or waiting at a loud airport gate. All you have to do is say Meta AI to burn it, and glasses the rest.
Here’s the catch and why this change looks so aggressive. Conversation Focus is not a cloud-based, computationally heavy AI tool. It works completely on the device. It doesn’t ping the Meta servers and doesn’t even need an active internet connection. When you buy the frames outright, you’re already paying for the audio processing chipset.
The meta says basic AI smart glasses the experience is free, but once you reach the three-hour limit, the only option is the $20-per-month tier, which increases your allowance to 15 hours. Unused hours will not carry over to the next billing cycle.
When asked about the change, Meta said that three hours is more than enough for the average person, and that the subscription is optional for “power users” who want high-end device support. But getting through 180 minutes is surprisingly simple. A few noisy dinners, a few hours on the road and a long business meeting will quickly eat up your monthly allowance.
Charging users to offset the expensive server costs of cloud AI is one thing, but paying for local, offline hardware capabilities crosses a new line in the wearables space. It’s a frustrating precedent to set for the tech industry as a whole.
Android Central’s Take
The reason why Meta’s Conversation Focus is one of the smartest features the company has put into its glasses; solves a real-world problem. That’s why putting a timer on a feature that runs natively on hardware you already own feels like a waste of money. If this is the direction Meta is going, I’d like to see subscriptions limited to cloud-powered AI features that actually cost money to run, not what your smart glasses can do for themselves.





