Key Takeaways
- Meta bans third-party AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Perplexity from WhatsApp.
- The new policy takes effect on January 15, 2026.
- Business AI for customer service remains unaffected.
- Meta cites server load, but AI industry rivalry is evident.
Meta is tightening its control over the AI chatbot ecosystem on WhatsApp by banning third-party assistants. A policy update prohibits general-purpose AI chatbots from using the WhatsApp Business API, effectively removing services like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Luzia, and Poke from the platform.
The new rules, published on October 18, will be enforced starting January 15, 2026. This move consolidates Meta’s position in the competitive AI space, following the prominent integration of its own Meta AI across its apps.
“Providers and developers of artificial intelligence or machine learning technologies, including but not limited to large language models, generative artificial intelligence platforms, general-purpose artificial intelligence assistants, or similar technologies as determined by Meta in its sole discretion (“AI Providers”), are strictly prohibited from accessing or using the WhatsApp Business Solution, whether directly or indirectly, for the purposes of providing, delivering, offering, selling, or otherwise making available such technologies when such technologies are the primary (rather than incidental or ancillary) functionality being made available for use, as determined by Meta in its sole discretion,” the updated WhatsApp business API policy reads.
Business AI Exempt from Ban
Meta clarified that the ban does not apply to businesses using AI for customer support. E-commerce platforms, banks, travel companies, and healthcare providers can continue using AI tools on WhatsApp.
A company spokesperson told TechCrunch that third-party AI chatbots created significant system burden and increased message volume, requiring support resources Meta isn’t prepared to provide.
Broader AI Competition at Play
While server load is the stated reason, Meta’s aggressive moves in artificial intelligence are well-documented. The company recently established Superintelligence Labs, hiring top talent from OpenAI and other AI firms.
This reflects the intense industry race toward achieving superintelligence—a hypothetical AI stage where machines perform tasks as well as or better than humans.



