
WhatsApp’s recent rewrite of its Business Solution terms is triggering a dramatic redistribution of where conversational AI lives: starting January 15, 2026, third‑party, general‑purpose chatbots such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Copilot will be removed from WhatsApp’s Business API, forcing millions of users and dozens of startups to migrate to vendor‑owned apps, web portals, or alternative messaging surfaces.
Background
WhatsApp’s Business Solution — commonly called the WhatsApp Business API — was created to let companies run predictable, enterprise‑grade customer communications: order confirmations, appointment reminders, and structured support workflows. In October 2025 Meta added a new “AI Providers” clause to those terms that explicitly bars creators of large language models, generative AI platforms, and general‑purpose AI assistants from using the Business Solution when the AI is the primary functionality being provided. The restriction carries a firm enforcement date of January 15, 2026. The change was not hypothetical: OpenAI publicly warned users that ChatGPT on WhatsApp would cease to function after that date and invited more than 50 million people who had interacted with ChatGPT on WhatsApp to link their accounts to preserve history. Microsoft issued its own advisory confirming that Copilot on WhatsApp will also stop working on January 15, 2026, and urged users to export chat history because the WhatsApp integration was unauthenticated and cannot be migrated into Copilot accounts automatically.What changed — the policy in plain language
The new restriction
WhatsApp’s revised Business Solution terms introduce a clear line: the Business API is for business‑to‑customer automation and transactional messaging, not a distribution platform for consumer‑facing AI chat assistants. The terms define “AI Providers” broadly and state that Meta may determine, at its sole discretion, whether a given use counts as the AI being the primary functionality. In practice, that gives WhatsApp wide latitude to block general‑purpose assistants that were being offered as a product through the API.Carve‑outs and boundaries
The policy is not an absolute ban on AI inside WhatsApp. Businesses that use AI incidentally — for example, airline ticketing bots, order‑status automations, or support triage systems where AI is embedded within a wider customer‑service workflow — remain permitted. The ban targets consumer chat assistants and other open‑ended LLM deployments that used the Business API as a low‑friction distribution channel.Timeline and immediate impact
- October 2025: Meta publishes the Business Solution terms update introducing the “AI Providers” section.
- October 21, 2025: OpenAI confirms ChatGPT will no longer be available on WhatsApp after January 15, 2026 and instructs users how to link accounts to preserve chats.
- November 24–25, 2025: Microsoft posts formal guidance that Copilot on WhatsApp will be discontinued on January 15, 2026 and recommends exporting conversations.
- January 15, 2026: Enforcement date — third‑party, general‑purpose chatbots using the Business API must stop operating.
Who’s affected — scale and scope
Consumers
Many everyday users discovered and adopted LLM assistants via WhatsApp because it’s already their daily messaging surface. OpenAI reported that more than 50 million people used ChatGPT on WhatsApp, a user base that must now be redirected to the ChatGPT app, website, or other first‑party surfaces. Microsoft says Copilot reached “millions” of users through its WhatsApp integration since late 2024. These numbers demonstrate the scale of the disruption.AI vendors and startups
Startups that built quick, low‑friction experiences on WhatsApp — including Perplexity, Luzia, Poke and others — face the loss of a high‑reach discovery channel. Many of these services relied on a simple contact‑based model that bypassed formal account linking; losing WhatsApp means they must drive users to native apps, web flows, or alternate messengers like Telegram.Enterprises and developers
Businesses that mixed general‑purpose assistants into customer interactions will need to audit their use of the Business Solution and either re‑architect flows to make AI ancillary or migrate to other channels that permit open assistants. The policy places a premium on authenticated, account‑backed integrations rather than anonymous, contact‑based distribution.Data portability and privacy — the user pain points
Exports, unauthenticated sessions, and continuity
Both OpenAI and Microsoft explicitly urged users to take action to keep their WhatsApp conversations: OpenAI suggested linking to ChatGPT accounts, while Microsoft said users should use WhatsApp’s export features because Copilot chat history could not be imported into its native Copilot surfaces. The technical reason is simple: the WhatsApp contact model operated largely without authentication tied to a vendor account, so vendors lack an identity link necessary to migrate chat transcripts into a persistent, account‑backed history. Users exporting chats should note two important caveats:- Exported chat files leave WhatsApp’s end‑to‑end encryption protections once extracted; how you store those exports matters for privacy.
- Migration is manual and imperfect: exported text may lack metadata, embedded references, or attachments that vendors’ own apps use to reconstitute conversational context.
Practical steps users must take now
- Open the WhatsApp chat with the AI contact (ChatGPT, Copilot, or other).
- Use WhatsApp’s Export Chat feature and choose whether to include media.
- Store the exported file in a secure, encrypted location if it contains sensitive material.
- Sign up for the vendor’s native app or web surface, link your accounts where supported (OpenAI offers a link‑through via the chatbot’s contact profile), and recreate any critical prompts or files.
Why Meta did this — operational reasons, monetization, and strategic control
Meta frames the change as a reaffirmation of the Business Solution’s original purpose: enterprise messaging, not a distribution layer for consumer AI assistants. The company also points to operational burdens: open‑ended assistants can generate large, unpredictable message volumes, multimedia payloads, and moderation workloads that don’t fit the Business API’s capacity and billing model. Tech reporting and Meta’s statements consistently emphasize those operational and product intent rationales. But the policy also has clear strategic consequences: by narrowing third‑party access to its high‑reach messaging surface, Meta implicitly funnels general‑purpose conversational experiences toward Meta AI — the assistant Meta controls inside WhatsApp — while preserving the Business API for merchants and enterprises. Several observers see this as a competitive move that shifts distribution power back to platform owners.Regulatory and competition implications
The policy change has attracted regulatory attention. Italy’s competition authority recently broadened an antitrust probe into Meta over the integration of AI tools in WhatsApp and the new Business Solution terms, questioning whether the update could unfairly disadvantage rivals and restrict market access. That probe underscores that platform policy changes with competitive effects will soon be scrutinized by regulators across jurisdictions. Expect further inquiries and possibly follow‑on enforcement in regions where WhatsApp holds significant market power. The core tension for regulators will be whether WhatsApp is exercising legitimate product stewardship or leveraging platform control to privilege its own AI services.Winners, losers, and strategic reorientation
Early winners
- Meta / WhatsApp / Meta AI: The policy clears space for Meta’s own assistant to be the primary general‑purpose chatbot inside WhatsApp, improving retention metrics and increasing the appeal of Meta’s AI surfaces.
- Vendors with strong native surfaces: Companies that already invested in authenticated apps and web experiences (e.g., those with robust account systems) will likely retain most users, because they can offer a smoother sign‑in migration path.
Early losers
- Startups relying on low‑effort WhatsApp discovery: Small vendors and experimenters lose an inexpensive acquisition channel that exposed products to billions of users. Many will need fresh marketing budgets to regain reach.
- Users who prioritized convenience over account setup: These users face friction — a separate app install, account creation, or a manual export/backup step — and some fraction will not follow through, resulting in lost usage and potentially lost revenue for vendors.
Broader industry effects
The policy accelerates a migration trend toward authenticated, vendor‑owned experiences where providers control the user identity, monetization, and feature set. That favors companies with existing ecosystems and weakens the “ambient assistant” model that relied on piggybacking inside dominant messaging apps. The result will likely be more first‑party investments (native apps, PWAs, Windows and macOS clients) and renewed interest in alternative messaging platforms that remain open to third‑party bots.Security, moderation, and technical reasoning — how plausible is Meta’s argument?
Meta’s operational argument is credible in certain respects: open‑ended LLM assistants produce unpredictable context lengths, a high volume of back‑and‑forth messages, and increased content moderation burdens. Those patterns differ from the predictable templates and one‑to‑many notifications the Business API was built to accommodate. However, the actual technical necessity of a global prohibition — rather than a tiered or quota‑based approach — is debatable. Some alternatives Meta could have adopted include:- Rate limiting or throttling LLM‑style traffic on Business API endpoints.
- Requiring authentication and verified vendor accounts for high‑volume LLM traffic.
- Introducing cost‑based controls to reflect the higher compute and moderation costs.
Practical guidance for Windows users and IT admins
For individual users
- Export any important ChatGPT or Copilot conversations from WhatsApp immediately and store them in an encrypted location.
- Install the vendor’s native app (ChatGPT on iOS/Android/macOS, Copilot mobile app, or the vendor web portal) and link accounts where the vendor offers a migration link.
- Recreate essential prompts or saved templates inside the vendor’s native interface; expect some formatting and metadata loss during export/import.
For IT administrators and product teams
- Audit any flows that relied on general‑purpose LLMs via WhatsApp Business Solution.
- Reclassify chatbot use cases as either “business‑incidental” or primary‑product assistants; only continue using the Business Solution for the former.
- Design for portability: require authenticated accounts and implement export/import hooks before any single platform change can sever access.
- Communicate deadlines and migration instructions clearly to customers; provide secure transfer options and document retention policies.
Risks and caveats — what to watch for
- User attrition and lost AI continuity: Many users adopted assistants inside WhatsApp because of convenience; some will not migrate, and that attrition could be material for services that monetize via subscriptions or in‑chat transactions.
- Data security after export: Exported transcripts often leave the protection envelope of end‑to‑end encryption. Vendors and users must treat exported files as sensitive.
- Regulatory scrutiny: Antitrust investigators will pay attention to whether platform rules are applied in a non‑discriminatory manner, especially where a platform concurrently offers its own competing assistant. Italy’s expanded probe into Meta’s WhatsApp AI moves is an early example.
- Fragmentation and vendor lock‑in: The move increases the effort required to switch assistants and could push the market toward vertical integration, reducing interoperability and consumer choice.
Strategic recommendations for vendors
- Prioritize authenticated experiences and user account linking to ensure portability and reduce risk from sudden platform policy changes.
- Invest in first‑party apps (mobile, web, Windows/Mac) with compelling onboarding flows that make account creation frictionless.
- Consider multi‑channel strategies (email, web, alternative messengers) to diversify discovery and distribution.
- Build export/import and backup tooling into the product roadmap so users retain control over their data.
Conclusion
WhatsApp’s Business Solution rewrite and the January 15, 2026 enforcement date mark a watershed moment in the distribution of conversational AI. The change halts a recent experiment where AI vendors used WhatsApp as a low‑friction storefront and forces a strategic pivot to authenticated, vendor‑owned surfaces. For users, the near‑term imperative is practical: export conversations and migrate to first‑party apps if continued access matters. For startups and developers, the lesson is structural: do not rely on a single platform for scale; invest in identity, portability, and multi‑channel reach. For regulators and competition watchers, the situation will be a live test of how platform policy intersects with market power when a dominant messenger shifts the rules that govern access to billions of users.Source: Thurrott.com WhatsApp is Losing its ChatGPT and Copilot Chatbots

