CapCut, a video-editing app from ByteDance, returns for US users


CapCut became unavailable in the US just before a federal law banning TikTok and other ByteDance apps took effect on Jan 19. — Photo by appshunter.io on Unsplash

TikTok is not the only app owned by the Chinese Internet giant ByteDance that is flickering back to life.

CapCut, a popular video-editing app, came back online in the United States on Jan 21 after going dark over the weekend.

Users who opened the app or visited its website were greeted with a pop-up message Tuesday that began: “Thanks for your patience and support. CapCut is back in the US!”

CapCut became unavailable in the country just before a federal law banning TikTok and other ByteDance apps took effect on Jan 19. TikTok returned for US users midday Sunday after Donald Trump said he would issue an executive order to stall enforcement of the law once he was sworn in as president.

His order, issued Monday, reassured some Internet hosting companies that would have faced hefty fines for distributing or maintaining TikTok that they could now do so without penalties. TikTok said that Lemon8, a sister app, began to work again around the same time as TikTok.

Apple and Google are complying with the law, which explicitly requires app store operators to stop distributing and updating ByteDance apps. TikTok, CapCut and Lemon8 were not available on either company’s app store as of Tuesday afternoon in New York. The return of CapCut is significant, particularly after Instagram, which is owned by Meta, announced a rival app called Edits over the weekend.

The federal law concerning ByteDance said its apps would be banned in the United States if they were not sold to a non-Chinese owner by Jan 19. The law was passed by Congress, signed by President Joe Biden and upheld unanimously by the Supreme Court on Friday, but Trump’s order extended the deadline by 75 days. Tech companies are taking different approaches to working with ByteDance apps, as it is not clear whether the president has the power to halt enforcement of a federal law.

Mae Karwowski, the founder of Obviously, an influencer marketing firm, said creators were breathing sighs of relief to have CapCut back.

“People just find it to be the easiest, most straightforward way to edit videos on the fly,” she said. “I heard so many people saying, ‘Oh man, this is going to hurt on its own’, even outside of not being able to post to TikTok.”

She added that CapCut’s disappearance was jarring for some creators, who did not realise that it would also be affected by the new law. “A lot of people forgot they go hand in hand and they’re owned by the same people,” Karwowski said.

TikTok didn’t respond to a request for comment on when CapCut returned, or why it had stayed offline longer than TikTok and Lemon8. ©2025 The New York Times Company

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Big global investors see gold in AI but don't buy the rush
Adobe plugs Photoshop, Acrobat tools into ChatGPT
Vivendi in last ditch effort to avert EU fine for closing Lagardere deal too soon
Wingtech invites Nexperia custodians to Beijing for talks on control of the company - source
South Korea to require advertisers to label AI-generated ads
Intel loses challenge against EU antitrust ruling but wins reduced fine
New report shows rise in violence against women journalists and activists linked to digital abuse
Survey: Most US teens use YouTube and TikTok daily, some ‘almost constantly’
South Korea to consider setting up $3.1 billion foundry to grow local chip sector
Australian mum of late teen says social media ban 'bittersweet'

Others Also Read