Meta’s US$200 Billion Year Signals AI Ad Strength

by: The Malketeer

Meta crossed a significant milestone in 2025, reporting more than US$200 billion in annual revenue as advertising once again carried the business.

The performance highlights the company’s renewed momentum following earlier disruptions from privacy changes and economic headwinds.

For the December quarter, Meta recorded revenue of US$59.89 billion, up 24% year-on-year.

Advertising accounted for nearly 97% of the total, reinforcing its central role in Meta’s business model.

Advertising rebounds on AI delivery and engagement

Advertising revenue reached US$58.14 billion in Q4, supported by an 18% rise in ad impressions and a 6% increase in average ad prices.

Across the full year, impressions grew 12% while prices climbed 9%, marking a clear turnaround from previous pricing pressures.

Meta attributed much of this rebound to AI-driven improvements in ad delivery, targeting and measurement, which have made its platforms more attractive to performance marketers seeking efficiency and scale.

Family of Apps drives scale and demand

Growth was anchored by Meta’s Family of Apps, including Facebook and Instagram.

Daily active users reached 3.58 billion in Q4, a 7% year-on-year increase, as engagement continued to rise across feeds, video and messaging.

AI-powered formats such as Advantage+ and Reels placements proved especially popular during the year-end shopping season, helping Meta attract larger holiday budgets despite strong competition from TikTok and retail media networks.

Non-ad businesses remain a drag

While advertising surged, Meta’s non-core businesses continued to lag.

Reality Labs generated just US$955 million in Q4 revenue and remained loss-making, weighing on overall margins.

Strong ad performance and cost discipline helped offset these pressures, lifting net income 9% to US$22.77 billion for the quarter and underscoring how dependent Meta’s profitability remains on advertising scale and efficiency.

Cautious optimism for 2026

Looking ahead, founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg struck a measured tone.

While reiterating long-term commitments to AI, augmented reality and virtual reality, management acknowledged that near-term growth will continue to hinge on ad performance and user engagement.

Meta warned that economic uncertainty and regulatory developments could affect advertiser sentiment, even as AI tools promise further gains in targeting and conversion.

Regulatory and political pressure builds

Alongside its financial momentum, Meta faces growing scrutiny.

Expanding AI infrastructure has drawn political attention over data-centre energy use and environmental impact.

Separately, Zuckerberg is set to testify in a landmark US trial examining whether social platforms intentionally designed addictive experiences for younger users.

For marketers, the results reaffirm Meta’s enduring advertising power.

For regulators and investors, they underscore a business increasingly defined by how effectively — and responsibly — it can monetise attention at global scale.

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