
Meta has announced the discontinuation of its Quest for Business program, intended to bring Meta’s VR headsets including the Meta Quest 3 into more businesses and educational establishments.
Hardware sales for Quest for Business will end on February 20th, and the platform itself will wind down fully on January 4, 2030. At that point, the software these business-focused Quest headsets use will stop working.
It is just the latest in a series of news stories that paint a bleak picture for the future of the beloved Quest VR series, as Meta puts increased focus on its Ray-Ban Meta augmented reality glasses.
What Is Quest For Business?
Wondering what Quest for Business is about? It’s a long-standing service for business users. It uses the same VR hardware you might buy in a store, including the Meta Quest 3, but also comes with a monthly fee that allows for centralised corporate control over what those headsets can do.
Much like work laptops platforms used by mid-size and larger corporations, IT administrators get much greater say over what these Meta Quest VR headsets can be used for.
The one slight bright side to this news is Meta is nixing monthly fees for the remainder of the supported term for applicable accounts. That’s until January 2030, for those using the most recent Meta Quest 3 and Quest 3S hardware.
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Meta has not announced sign-up figures for the Quest for Business platform, but its roots are actually deeper than you might guess.
Quest for Business has been around since 2017, when Oculus — not Meta — was the brand behind these VR headsets. Meta, then going by the name Facebook, announced its plan to acquire Oculus in 2014, but the process of removing Oculus branding fully didn’t happen until 2021 and 2022.
There are also technical reasons behind the likely limited appeal of even the latest Quest 3/3S hardware as a business solution. Unlike Apple’s Vision Pro headset, Quests do not have nearly the pixel density required to display information with sharpness and detail comparable with normal vision, making them largely unsuitable for use as PC-replacers.
This Quest for Business news is the latest piece of a series of business decisions that can only be read as bad news for VR fans.
Meta plans to reduce its Reality Labs staff by up to 10%, and has made huge cuts to its own development studios. Three major players — Twisted Pixel, Armature and Sanzaru Games — have been shuttered, while Supernatural is being downsized following news the Supernatural VR fitness app will no longer get significant updates.
That Meta’s VR momentum was running low was already in evidence. The company did not release a new VR headset in 2025, and has previously recognized its struggles to keep its VR user base of newer headsets like the Meta Quest 3 engaged.