WhatsApp Updates Policy to Ban AI Chatbots Like ChatGPT and Perplexity

Meta Tightens Control on AI Use Through WhatsApp

WhatsApp has officially updated its business API policy to ban general-purpose AI chatbots from using its platform. The new rules will come into effect on January 15, 2026, and directly impact AI assistants like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Perplexity, Luzia, and Poke.

Meta said the move is meant to align WhatsApp with its original purpose — enabling businesses to connect with customers rather than hosting standalone AI assistants.

What the new WhatsApp terms say

In its updated policy, Meta added a dedicated section for “AI providers.” The company said providers of large language models, generative AI platforms, and general-purpose assistants are prohibited from using the WhatsApp Business Solution to deliver their services if AI is their main offering.

Meta clarified that AI tools used by businesses for customer support — such as travel or retail chatbots — will not be affected. These are still allowed since they serve specific business purposes rather than acting as full-fledged AI companions.

Why WhatsApp is taking this step

Meta explained that WhatsApp’s Business API was built for business-to-customer communication, not for hosting AI models. However, in recent months, it noticed a rising number of AI assistants using WhatsApp as a distribution platform, leading to heavy message volumes and higher system demands.

A Meta spokesperson told TechCrunch that the focus remains on helping “tens of thousands of businesses” that rely on WhatsApp for customer interactions. The company said that general-purpose chatbots “fall outside the intended design and strategic focus” of its business API.

Impact on AI platforms and chatbot makers

This decision means AI chatbots will no longer be allowed on WhatsApp, leaving Meta AI as the only assistant integrated into the platform. The ban could significantly affect AI firms that recently launched bots to reach WhatsApp’s vast user base of over 3 billion people.

Earlier, OpenAI introduced ChatGPT on WhatsApp, and Perplexity followed with its own assistant. These bots could answer questions, generate images, and even reply to voice notes. But they also created high message traffic — something Meta said the API was not designed to handle.

Meta’s business focus behind the move

Behind the policy shift lies a clear business goal. WhatsApp’s Business API is one of its main revenue streams. It charges companies for specific message types like marketing, utility, and support. Since AI chatbots did not fit into these categories, Meta couldn’t monetize them effectively.

During Meta’s Q1 2025 earnings call, Mark Zuckerberg emphasized that business messaging is the company’s next big revenue pillar after advertising. WhatsApp’s massive user base and its growing adoption among businesses make it central to that strategy.

With this update, Meta aims to retain control over AI experiences on WhatsApp, limit misuse of its API, and strengthen its business-focused ecosystem.

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