TikTok has successfully completed its transition from Chinese to American ownership — but the investors who engineered the switch now owe the US government $10 billion as a transaction fee for making the deal possible. Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake completed the acquisition in January, paying $2.5 billion upfront to the US Treasury. The remaining payments will continue in scheduled installments until the total $10 billion commitment is fulfilled, completing one of the most unusual financial arrangements in the history of US governance.
The deal was the culmination of a years-long bipartisan effort to force ByteDance to sever its ties to TikTok’s US operations. Congressional hearings and intelligence assessments had established a broad political consensus that ByteDance’s Chinese ownership posed unacceptable risks to American data security. Trump’s executive order in September gave formal approval to the restructured ownership, with the president hailing the result as a triumph of American-led management.
Trump was explicit about the financial reward he expected the US to receive. He coined the term “fee-plus” to describe the payment and repeated it on multiple public occasions, making clear that the administration viewed its approval of the deal as a financially valuable contribution deserving of outsized compensation. The $10 billion figure is the material result of that position.
JD Vance estimated TikTok’s US business at approximately $14 billion in value, placing the $10 billion fee at roughly 70% of total deal valuation. Investment banks handling comparable transactions typically charge advisory fees of around 1% of total value, making the administration’s claim approximately 70 times the market rate. The financial disproportion is one of the most discussed aspects of the entire deal.
TikTok continues to operate normally for American users, managed by its new US-based owners with profit-sharing obligations to ByteDance maintained. The payment structure reflects a Trump administration increasingly comfortable with treating government facilitation of corporate deals as a revenue-generating activity.