TikTok owner ByteDance to reportedly purchase $14 billion worth of Nvidia AI GPUs in 2026 — Company betting on Beijing's approval following Trump admin's ease on AI export controls

The logo of Chinese internet company Bytedance, parent company of popular social media application TikTok, is seen at its Singapore headquarters in Marina Bay Financial Centre in Singapore on Sunday, 18 June 2023.
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Chinese tech firm ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, is reportedly planning to spend 100 billion yuan on Nvidia's H200 AI GPUs in 2026, which translates to around $14 billion USD. This planned purchase is set to add to the growing stockpile of Nvidia GPUs the company already owns.

Despite numerous setbacks, ByteDance spent 85 billion yuan on Nvidia chips throughout 2025, marking a significant increase for next year, South China Morning Post reports. ByteDance is one of the biggest local tech players in the region, rivaling Tencent when it comes to AI operations. It was recently evaluated at a market cap of $500 billion, so this spending is part of its massive AI budget for 2026.

Nvidia server GPUs

Nvidia H200 GPUs — the ones ByteDance will buy if allowed to (Image credit: Nvidia)

Around a year ago, ByteDance started renting cloud compute from other countries to evade U.S. sanctions that would prevent it from building servers within China. TikTok, the company's flagship IP, is essentially a massive inference engine with powerful AI needed for everything from curating algorithms (via TikTok's 'For You' page) to running ads and moderating content.

The company's own GPUs are conspicuously missing from the conversation. One would imagine that if mass production was originally planned for 2026, ByteDance wouldn't need to go so hard on its Nvidia investment, but Nvidia's GPUs are critical for AI training workloads, while its homegrown chips may be used for inference.

Therefore, even though custom silicon is purportedly being developed by the company for next year, ByteDance still needs chips for training; after all, it runs Doubao — the most popular AI chatbot in China.

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Hassam Nasir
Contributing Writer

Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.