Meta is extending advertising access on its Threads platform to global advertisers, signaling a shift from experimental monetization to a more aggressive rollout. Following several months of regional testing in the U.S. and Japan, the company has announced that ads will now be accessible to all eligible advertisers worldwide. The move is designed to tap into Threads’ rapidly growing user base, which now exceeds 320 million monthly active users, and to position the app as a serious contender in the social media advertising space—particularly against Elon Musk’s X.
Ad placements in the Threads feed will be enabled by default for campaigns using Meta’s Advantage+ or Manual Placements tools. However, advertisers using manual placements will still be able to opt out. While the ad placement toggle is universal, actual ad delivery will continue to roll out selectively by market, with broader availability planned over time.
Meta is touting the scale and advertising potential of Threads, citing internal data suggesting that most users already follow at least one business on the app. That level of engagement helps frame Threads as a safer and more brand-friendly environment compared to competitors, some of which have struggled with content moderation or public perception.
Yet, Threads’ rapid user growth hasn’t been entirely organic. Its tight integration with Instagram—leveraging existing friend graphs and familiarity—allowed it to onboard millions of users almost instantly. This baked-in user base offered Meta a competitive edge, but it’s also a point of contention in an ongoing antitrust case with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, which argues that Meta’s dominance stems from acquisitions and integration rather than competition.
As Threads continues to evolve, Meta has also been adopting ideas from newer, decentralized platforms like Mastodon and Bluesky. Threads is being integrated with the ActivityPub protocol, potentially linking it to the broader fediverse—an open, decentralized social network model. While this integration is not yet complete, it would make Threads the largest service within the fediverse by a wide margin, potentially outpacing Mastodon’s modest user base.
Threads has also incorporated features resembling those of Bluesky, such as custom feeds and curated user recommendation lists. Despite these additions, Threads still defaults users to a centrally curated “For You” feed and lacks the moderation tools that give Bluesky users more control over their experience.
Meta’s push to monetize Threads through global ad placements reflects both confidence in the platform’s scalability and urgency to solidify its role within Meta’s broader revenue ecosystem. As the platform grows and adapts, whether Threads can maintain user interest while serving advertisers effectively—and under regulatory scrutiny—remains a key question moving forward.