TikTok will take a bigger cut from its Shop as it seeks $17.5 billion in annual U.S. ecommerce revenue

The price of doing business on TikTok Shop is going up — at least for sellers. TikTok will nearly quadruple its commission from Shop transactions as it looks to spark significant growth in its American ecommerce business.

Currently, TikTok takes a 2% cut plus 30 cents from all transactions on its Shop hub. On January 3, the video app announced a change that will gradually bring its commission up to 8%. According to The Information, which cited a note sent to U.S.-based Shop sellers, TikTok’s cut will go up to 6% on April 1 and will reach 8% on July 1. That rate will apply to “most sales.” On sales over $10,000 in some categories, TikTok will apply a 3% commission rate.

TikTok will also reduce the number of subsidies it provides to U.S. Shop sellers. The app has marked down some products while paying out the full item value to sellers, but those offers will now be limited to top-selling items, according to The Information.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Thanks in part to TikTok’s regulatory battles with the U.S. government, its Shop tab experienced a sluggish start in the West. But as the ByteDance-owned app has rolled out more ecommerce features, creators and vendors have shown more interest in TikTok Shop.

As Shop sales have gone up

, some users have made a stink about the hub’s clunky design and substandard product offerings. Those complaints didn’t slow down TikTok’s ecommerce operation during the holiday season, when sales went wild.

To create momentum for Shop, TikTok has incurred major losses. In August, the app projected that its ecommerce venture would lose $500 million in the U.S. in 2023. TikTok is hoping to crawl out of that hole by increasing commission rates and limiting subsidies. Even once it reaches an 8% cut, its commission rates will still be similar to the ones offered by Amazon.

Speaking of Amazon, TikTok sees itself as a challenger to that company’s ecommerce empire. According to a report in Bloomberg, which cited “people familiar with the matter,” TikTok wants to increase its U.S. Shop revenues tenfold in 2024. Its reported targets for its Stateside ecommerce business range as high as $17.5 billion of annual revenue.

A statement from TikTok disputed that report. “The speculated US merchandise sales figures represented by Bloomberg are inaccurate,” the statement reads. TikTok Shop has a cloudy future in the West, but the current commission hikes suggest that the app would like to earn more from its ecommerce experiment.

Share
Published by
Sam Gutelle

Recent Posts

Alphabet and Meta, like OpenAI, are holding conversations about AI with Hollywood studios

Will Hollywood studios license their productions as training material for artificial intelligence models? That question…

2 days ago

Kai Cenat has big plans: Creator ‘Hunger Games,’ more Soulslikes, and a chat with Kevin Hart

Kai Cenat is on a roll. After completing a marathon playthrough of the notoriously difficult…

2 days ago

Internet corgis Hammy and Maxine to host 3-day dog party Chonkfest in Philadelphia

The chonk is coming to Philadelphia. Next month, two of the internet's favorite corgis, Hammy…

2 days ago

Report: 65% of creators believe a TikTok ban would hurt their bottom line

An annual survey of more than 1,500 respondents has revealed the moneymaking strategies creators are…

2 days ago

YouTube adds more transparency with timestamps for its yellow dollar signs

YouTube is helping creators understand why yellow dollar signs show up on their videos. The platform…

3 days ago

Calling all memelords: The Biden reelection campaign wants to hire you

President Joe Biden is buying into the meme economy. The Biden for President (BFP) campaign has shared…

3 days ago