American TikTok users can continue to scroll through their feeds without interruption, but the deal that secured the platform’s future in the US carries an unprecedented financial cost: a $10 billion payment to the Trump administration from the investors who took over from ByteDance. Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake closed the acquisition in January, making an initial $2.5 billion Treasury payment. The remaining installments will continue until the total $10 billion is reached, fulfilling one of the most unusual financial obligations in the history of private corporate deals.
ByteDance’s divestiture of TikTok’s US operations was forced by a bipartisan congressional effort that had spent years building a case against the risks of Chinese ownership of a major American social media platform. Trump’s administration was central to shaping the deal’s final form, with a September executive order giving formal approval to the new ownership structure. The president described the result as a model of American ownership and control.
Trump had never been shy about his financial ambitions for the deal. His signature phrase “fee-plus” communicated clearly that the government’s approval and facilitation of the transaction was worth far more than a nominal payment. The $10 billion that has emerged from the deal is the direct expression of that stance.
Against TikTok’s US valuation of approximately $14 billion — as estimated by JD Vance — the $10 billion fee represents roughly 70% of total deal value. Investment banking advisory fees on comparable transactions typically stand at around 1% of total deal value. The administration’s fee is proportionally about 70 times larger than market conventions would suggest is appropriate.
TikTok operates normally for American users under the new ownership, with ByteDance still sharing in profits under the deal’s financial architecture. The $10 billion payment adds to a pattern of direct financial involvement by the Trump White House in the private sector that has generated consistent debate about the limits of executive commercial engagement.