March 18, 2026
Meta has rolled out 47 new advertising policy rules in March 2026, its biggest policy update in years. At the same time, the company is accelerating its push toward fully automated AI ad campaigns and has acquired Moltbook, an AI agent social network, signaling a major bet on autonomous advertising technology.
Here is what advertisers need to know – and what to do about it.
47 New Rules: What Changed
The new policy changes span across multiple categories that affect nearly every advertiser on the platform. Key areas include stricter requirements around AI-generated content disclosure, updated restrictions on health and wellness claims, tighter rules for financial services advertising, and expanded protections for minors.
For marketers running campaigns on Facebook and Instagram, the most impactful changes are:
- AI content labeling: Ads using AI-generated images, video, or voices must now include explicit disclosure
- Health claims: Stricter evidence requirements for supplements, wellness products, and fitness programs
- Financial ads: Enhanced verification for crypto, investment, and lending advertisements
- Teen protections: New restrictions on targeting and content shown to users under 18
- Automated content: Rules governing how AI-generated ad creative must be reviewed before going live
Advertisers who do not comply risk ad disapprovals, account restrictions, or permanent bans. Meta has signaled it will enforce the new rules starting immediately, with a 30-day grace period for some categories.
Fully Automated AI Ad Campaigns Are Coming
While tightening the rules, Meta is simultaneously pushing toward a future where AI handles the entire advertising process. The company has been testing fully automated campaigns where advertisers provide a business objective and budget, and Meta’s AI handles everything else – creative generation, audience targeting, placement selection, bid optimization, and performance reporting.
Early testing has shown promising results, with some advertisers reporting lower cost-per-acquisition and higher return on ad spend compared to manually managed campaigns. The system builds on Meta’s existing Advantage+ suite but takes automation several steps further.
The irony is not lost on advertisers: Meta is adding 47 new rules for human-managed campaigns while building a system where AI manages everything automatically – presumably in compliance with its own rules from the start.
Moltbook Acquisition: AI Agents for Advertising
Meta’s acquisition of Moltbook, an AI agent social network, adds another piece to the puzzle. The founders have been integrated into Meta’s research division, suggesting the company is building autonomous AI agents that could manage advertising campaigns independently. This fits the broader industry race for agent technology, where AI systems do not just recommend actions but take them autonomously.
For a deeper look at the tools shaping this space, see our Best AI social media tools 2026 guide.
Key Takeaways
- 47 new ad policy rules are live – audit your campaigns now for compliance
- AI-generated ad content now requires explicit disclosure labels
- Fully automated AI campaigns are in testing – advertisers provide objective and budget only
- 30-day grace period for some policy categories, but enforcement starts immediately for others
- Moltbook acquisition signals Meta’s push into autonomous AI ad agents
What This Means for Marketers
Audit your ad accounts immediately. Review all active campaigns against the new 47 rules. Pay special attention to AI-generated creative, health claims, and financial services ads. Non-compliance risks are real and enforcement is active.
Prepare for the automation shift. Meta’s direction is clear: it wants to own the entire ad process with AI. Marketers who resist will find themselves managing increasingly complex manual campaigns while competitors benefit from automated optimization. Start testing Advantage+ features now if you have not already.
Strategy becomes your moat. When AI handles execution, the differentiator shifts to business strategy, creative direction, and brand positioning. The media buyer role is evolving into an AI supervisor role – the question is how fast your team adapts.
Sources: AuditSocials, Social Media Today, MarketingProfs. This article may contain affiliate links.