Meta's Reality Labs Has Lost $83.5 Billion Over 21 Quarters
Average quarterly loss of $4B as company projects $125-145B AI spending in 2026
Auf einen Blick
- Meta reported Q1 2026 earnings showing $26.8B net income and $56.3B revenue, but Reality Labs lost $4B — the same as its 21-quarter average totaling $83.5B.
- The company projects 2026 capital expenditures of $125-145B for AI infrastructure, exceeding analyst expectations.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Reality Labs has been losing approximately $4 billion per quarter since 2021, totaling $83.5 billion in losses. Despite these losses, Meta continues to invest heavily in both AR/VR and AI. The company's core social media business remains highly profitable, funding these ambitious bets.
When Meta released its quarterly earnings report on Wednesday evening, a colleague pointed out how Meta lost $4 billion on Reality Labs, the division responsible for its AR glasses, VR headsets, and VR software. I yawned at first. Meta losing $4 billion on Reality Labs just didn't seem surprising. It's a given. Reality Labs lost another $4 billion, and also, the sky is blue. Then I realized, that itself is notable — for Meta, losses on this unit are quite literally average behavior. Over its last 21 quarterly earnings reports, dating back to 2021, Meta has lost a total of $83.5 billion on Reality Labs, which comes out to an average of about $4 billion in losses each quarter. That is bananas! Equally astounding is that as Meta pulls back from its metaverse ambitions, its spending on AI will be even more astronomical. True, it's not like Meta doesn't have the money. In the first quarter of this year, the social media giant posted a net income of $26.8 billion, up 61% over the year prior; revenue also increased 33% year-over-year to $56.3 billion. But despite its foundation in social media, Meta's current goal is to stay competitive with AI leaders like OpenAI and Anthropic. Meta projected that it will spend between $125 billion and $145 billion in 2026, exceeding analysts' projections and Meta's previous estimates. "We are increasing our infrastructure capex forecast for this year," Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on a public call with investors on Wednesday. "Most of that is due to higher component costs, particularly memory pricing [...] We are very focused on increasing the efficiency of our investments." Meta also spent a lot of money to build a metaverse that no one really wanted or cared about. It's going to take even more money to build an AI superintelligence that (maybe some) people actually want. Last year, Meta went on an expensive hiring spree, poaching over 50 AI researchers and engineers from competitors, which helped the company ship its newly overhauled AI model, Muse Spark, earlier this month. While CEO Mark Zuckerberg reported "large increases" in Meta AI use since that release, it's only getting more expensive to build and maintain AI products. On the earnings call, one concerned investor asked if Meta could provide an outlook for its 2027 capital expenditures. The response wasn't reassuring. "We aren't providing a specific outlook for 2027 capex, and we are, frankly, undergoing a very dynamic planning process ourselves as we're working through what our capacity needs will be over the coming years," replied Meta CFO Susan Li. "Our experience so far has been that we have continued to underestimate our compute needs."
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
Meta will continue Reality Labs losses through 2026 at current trajectory
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
2026 capex will likely exceed $140B given CFO's statement about underestimating compute needs
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Offene Fragen
- Will Meta's AI investments generate comparable returns to its social media business?
- How long will investors tolerate Reality Labs losses?
- Can Meta actually achieve superintelligence with projected spending?






