While TikTok’s American users scroll through videos without interruption, behind the scenes the platform’s new owners are managing a $10 billion financial obligation to the Trump administration. Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake completed the acquisition of TikTok’s US operations from ByteDance in January, paying $2.5 billion to the Treasury at closing. Further payments are scheduled in installments until the total $10 billion commitment is fully discharged.
The deal’s roots are in years of bipartisan congressional concern about the risks of ByteDance’s Chinese ownership of TikTok. Legislators argued that the platform’s access to American user data created an unacceptable national security exposure. Trump’s administration shaped the final terms of the divestiture, with a September executive order providing formal approval. The president expressed pride in the outcome and framed it as a win for American technological sovereignty.
Trump had been public about his financial expectations throughout. His use of the phrase “fee-plus” communicated that the government’s role in enabling the deal warranted substantial and above-market compensation. The $10 billion obligation now binding the investor group is the contractual expression of that expectation.
JD Vance estimated TikTok’s US operations at approximately $14 billion in value. At $10 billion, the government’s fee represents roughly 70% of that total, compared to investment banking advisory fees of around 1% on comparable transactions. The contrast between the platform’s business-as-usual operation and the extraordinary financial mechanics underpinning it is perhaps the most striking aspect of the entire arrangement.
TikTok’s American users will likely notice nothing different about their experience on the platform. But the $10 billion financial obligation their platform’s new owners are carrying toward the US government is one of the most unusual features of any major corporate transition in recent American history.