Meta buys Manus for $2 billion to power high-stakes AI agent race

  • Meta has acquired AI startup Manus in a deal reportedly worth over $2 billion
  • Manus builds autonomous AI agents that perform complex tasks like coding and data analysis
  • The acquisition accelerates Meta’s pivot from chatbot tools to task-completing AI across its platforms

Meta has acquired AI startup Manus, known for its semi-autonomous AI agents, in a deal reportedly valued at more than $2 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal. It’s one of the largest AI acquisitions to date. More importantly, it underscores Meta’s plan to shift from creating foundational models like Llama to providing full-service AI agents capable of completing complex tasks for individuals and businesses.

Meta said it plans to make the AI agent platform part of its Meta AI assistant and enterprise offerings. Manus agents can perform complex analytics and long-term research and planning, along with the more usual conversations and image generation. It can also go out to the web and carry out tasks for users, which is why it’s named Manus, Latin for hand.

“We will continue to operate and sell the Manus service, as well as integrate it into our products,” Meta said in a statement. “Manus is already serving the daily needs of millions of users and businesses worldwide. It launched its first General AI Agent earlier this year and has already served more than 147T tokens and created more than 80M virtual computers. We plan to scale this service to many more businesses.”

The reported valuation aligns with where Manus had been headed before Meta intervened. The company had been raising new funds at a $2 billion valuation when Meta approached with an offer. With over $125 million in revenue run rate just eight months after launch, Manus had proven not only its technical capabilities but also its commercial appeal.

But this isn’t just a story of a high-value tech buyout. It marks a directional turn for Meta, one that deepens its commitment to building AI that does more than chat. In fact, Manus was not simply another chatbot; it was one of the first widely available agentic systems able to autonomously perform multi-step, goal-oriented tasks using a blend of reasoning, memory, and tool use. Users could, for instance, hand Manus a research objective or a programming task and watch it coordinate a solution end-to-end. That’s a radically different product category than LLMs trained solely to predict the next word.

AI agent future

Meta wants to build AI that acts. That’s also the reason Meta invested $14.3 billion in Scale AI earlier this year. But a working autonomous AI platform is several steps beyond. The company’s pricing model, a mix of free and premium subscriptions, helped it grow rapidly, especially among developers, analysts, and SMEs looking to automate workflows without hiring engineers.

And while Meta has been pouring money into building out its own LLMs, developing effective agentic behavior remains a highly specific engineering and design challenge. Tools like planning, memory, tool-use, and recursive reasoning can’t simply be bolted onto a large model, and Manus has already solved many of these problems.

“Joining Meta allows us to build on a stronger, more sustainable foundation without changing how Manus works or how decisions are made,” Manus CEO Xiao Hong said in a statement. “We’re excited about what the future holds with Meta and Manus working together, and we will continue to iterate the product and serve users that have defined Manus from the beginning.”

Meta is racing to build up AI agents among fierce competition. Google’s Gemini is actively developing agentic features, while OpenAI’s ChatGPT has introduced tools to perform tasks online and provide more assistance that adapts to context. But Manus promises to make it easy to integrate its services into other platforms. That earned it interest from companies like Microsoft, which tested Manus integration in Windows 11.

With Meta owning the whole thing, what happens next is just as much a question of strategy as it is technology.

Manus’s origins add a layer of complexity. Initially developed under the Chinese AI startup Butterfly Effect before spinning off, concerns over data security likely contributed to its relocation from Beijing to Singapore this year and the layoffs of most of its Chinese workforce. Meta’s acquisition even comes with an explicit condition that “there will be no continuing Chinese ownership interests,” according to the companies.

Meta has had to walk a fine line in the global AI race as it skirts regulatory scrutiny. Manus lets it jump ahead in product development, but will probably come with at least some probing questions about who owns the data used to run Manus. In 2026, no major American tech company can afford to look like it has Chinese influence, just ask TikTok.

Then there’s the hardware angle. Meta’s Reality Labs division doesn’t bring in much cash, but Meta still sees a future of smart glasses and agentic AI assistants that interact with the physical world. Manus could provide the cognitive layer for those ambitions.

The acquisition makes it clear that Meta sees 2026 as the time when AI chatbots will become AI agents. With Manus powering its AI platforms, Meta plans to be the tool of first resort when it comes to AI engaging with the real world.

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

We translated the Palantir manifesto for actual human beings

Palantir CEO Alex Karp is a man in charge of one of the most important and frightening companies in the world. Karp's new book,...

SpaceX cuts a deal to maybe buy Cursor for $60 billion

With an IPO looming for Elon Musk's SpaceX / xAI / X combo platter of companies, SpaceX has announced an odd arrangement to either...

YouTube is muting push notifications from channels you don’t watch

YouTube notifications can get messy fast, particularly if you’re subscribed to a lot of different channels. To address that, today the company will begin...

Cash App now supports accounts for kids 6-12

Cash App, the banking and payments app run by Block, has added support for parent-managed kids accounts. The new accounts include key benefits from...

Mozilla says it patched 271 Firefox vulnerabilities thanks to Anthropic’s Claude Mythos

Anthropic's buzzy announcement about using AI to improve cybersecurity earlier this month was met with plenty of skepticism. However, Mozilla shared some details that...

SpaceX and Cursor strike partnership that might end in a $60 billion acquisition

SpaceX and AI company Cursor have struck a new partnership that could see the owner of X buy the AI company for $60 billion...

Google Wallet adds Live Update for flight tracking

As previously teased, Google Wallet for Android now offers Live Updates for tracking your current flight. Read more @ 9to5google

The AirPods are Tim Cook’s most underrated achievement

The AirPods changed the direction of true wireless earbuds and became Apple’s most important accessory. | Photography by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge Apple...

Framework is building a better couch keyboard because everyone hates the Logitech one

If you have a wireless keyboard with a touchpad that lets you control your PC from across the room, chances are it's a Logitech...

Framework’s first eGPUs turn its laptop into a desktop PC

Remember when Framework made the first laptop where you can easily upgrade its entire internal video card in three minutes flat? The company's getting...