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Viral Trending content > Blog > World News > Would you pay for Facebook? Here’s where you might have to
World News

Would you pay for Facebook? Here’s where you might have to

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What is Facebook’s new external link limit test?The test currently affects users in the UK and US.How this could impact general Facebook usersEffects on news sharing and website trafficFailed before, but will it fail again?

Facebook (now Meta) is currently running a limited test that restricts some users to sharing only two external web links per month in organic posts unless they subscribe to Meta Verified, a paid verification service starting at around €10.80 to €12.90 per month (depending on region and purchase method). While this change primarily targets profiles in Professional Mode and Facebook Pages (used by creators and businesses), it could have ripple effects on general users who casually share links to articles, blogs, videos, or shopping sites.

What is Facebook’s new external link limit test?

Meta has confirmed it’s experimenting with capping the number of posts containing external links for certain non-subscribed accounts. Notifications seen by users state, “Starting December 16, certain Facebook profiles without Meta Verified will be limited to sharing links in two organic posts per month.”

The test currently affects users in the UK and US.

Exceptions include links in comments, affiliate links, and links to other Meta platforms (e.g., Instagram, WhatsApp). Publishers and news organisations are, for the moment, excluded. No charge to share viraltrendingcontent articles. Meta describes this as a way to evaluate if unlimited link sharing “adds additional value” for paid subscribers.

How this could impact general Facebook users

Most everyday users who don’t frequently share external links (e.g., more than two per month) won’t notice any direct changes, as the test is limited and focused on professional accounts. However, indirect effects could include:

  • Reduced Content Variety in Your Feed: If friends, family, or followed creators hit the limit, they might share fewer articles, news stories, recipes, or product links. This could make feeds feel more repetitive, with more native photos, videos, or text posts instead.
  • Less Sharing of News and Blogs: Casual users often spread interesting reads. A broader rollout could mean fewer shared links overall, limiting discovery of external content like viral stories or helpful guides.
  • Shift Toward On-Platform Content: Facebook may encourage more posts staying within its ecosystem, potentially reducing “leakage” to outside websites and keeping you scrolling longer on the app.

Social media analyst Matt Navarra says this is in line with platforms becoming more “pay-to-play”, which could discourage organic sharing altogether.

Effects on news sharing and website traffic

Even general users play a big role in distributing news by sharing links. This test builds on a long-term trend:

  • Facebook referrals to news sites dropped nearly 60 per cent from 2018 to 2024, with a slight recovery in 2025 (according to Chartbeat data).
  • Fewer user-shared links could further erode traffic to publishers, bloggers, and small businesses.
  • If expanded, it might make Facebook less useful for discovering external news, pushing users toward direct visits or other platforms.

Failed before, but will it fail again?

One notable failed attempt by Facebook to introduce charging for its services came in late 2023, when the company launched a paid “no-ads” subscription option for Facebook and Instagram users in the European Union, priced at around €9.99 to €12.99 per month. Intended as a response to strict EU privacy regulations requiring freely given consent for personalised advertising, the model offered users a choice: pay to remove ads and limit data use for targeting, or continue with the free ad-supported version. However, it faced an immediate and intense backlash from privacy advocates, including complaints filed by groups like Noyb (None Of Your Business), who argued that it violated GDPR principles by coercing users with a “privacy fee” rather than providing true free consent. European data protection authorities criticised the approach as undermining fundamental rights, leading to ongoing regulatory scrutiny and forcing Meta to defend the model legally without achieving widespread adoption or quelling the controversy.


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