Mark Zuckerberg Pulls Back From Metaverse After $70 Billion Loss as Meta Shifts Priorities to AI
Meta plans as much as 30 % budget cut for Reality Labs after massive spending on virtual-world ambitions fails to deliver
Meta’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, appears to be winding down his bold metaverse gamble — the initiative launched when Facebook was rebranded as Meta — after more than four years and roughly seventy billion dollars in cumulative losses.
The company is now preparing to cut as much as thirty percent from its metaverse budget in 2026, signaling a major strategic pivot from virtual reality to artificial-intelligence and hardware investments.
The metaverse endeavor — managed under Meta’s Reality Labs division — was originally conceived as the next frontier for social interaction, virtual collaboration and immersive online presence.
Since 2021, Reality Labs has reportedly accumulated nearly seventy billion dollars in operating losses, while failing to produce broadly successful consumer experiences or meaningful returns.
Executives familiar with internal planning say the proposed cuts are part of a broader reallocation of resources.
Meta is shifting focus toward AI-driven initiatives and wearable hardware — including smart glasses — areas seen as more promising given current market demand and technological momentum.
The planned reductions could include layoffs within Reality Labs.
Some projects already under pressure include social-VR worlds and virtual-reality headsets, reflecting waning investor confidence and shrinking user interest in the once-heralded metaverse platform.
Despite the retreat from virtual-reality ambitions, Meta’s core businesses — its family of apps — remain profitable.
The move has drawn approval from investors and analysts, who have questioned the sustainability of the metaverse strategy since its inception.
The shift underscores a fundamental reckoning with the limits of immersive virtual universes and a recalibration toward practical, near-term technologies where the company sees realistic paths to growth.
For Meta, the message is clear: the metaverse was an experiment.
AI and wearable computing may define its next chapter.