TikTok is thriving under its new American ownership, with its platform fully operational and its American user base intact. But the defining feature of the deal that secured its US future remains the $10 billion government fee committed by investors Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake to the Trump administration. An initial $2.5 billion was paid to the Treasury when the deal closed in January, with further installments scheduled until the total $10 billion is reached.
The divestiture of TikTok’s US operations from ByteDance was driven by years of bipartisan national security concern in Congress. The Trump administration shaped the final terms, with a September executive order providing formal approval. The president was publicly proud of the outcome and the financial arrangements attached to it.
Trump’s use of the phrase “fee-plus” throughout the negotiations was a signal that the government expected exceptional financial compensation for its enabling role. That signal has been translated into the $10 billion binding obligation now being paid down in stages — the most defining financial feature of an already extraordinary deal.
JD Vance estimated TikTok’s US value at approximately $14 billion. At $10 billion, the government’s fee equals roughly 70% of that total — compared to investment banking advisory fees of around 1% on comparable transactions. Even as TikTok’s business performance attracts positive attention, the $10 billion fee remains the deal’s most discussed and most consequential element.
TikTok will continue to grow under its new management, adding users and revenue while maintaining profit-sharing with ByteDance. But no amount of future business success will alter the fact that the deal responsible for its American future included a government fee that redefined what it means to do business with Washington’s blessing.