Revitalization of bid On October 3, Musk's legal team informed Twitter that Musk had changed his mind and decided to move forward with his proposed acquisition at the originally agreed-upon price of $54.20 per share, on the condition that Twitter drop its lawsuit. The reason for this reversal was attributed to concerns from Musk's team that they would not be able to prove that there was a
material adverse effect justifying a break from contract. Musk and Agrawal's depositions were originally scheduled for October 6 and 10, respectively. Musk stated that his purchase of Twitter was part of his ambition to create an "
everything app" called X, which would offer many different services. In response, McCormick asked both sides to propose to her how they should proceed. Twitter shares surged by 23 percent as a result of Musk's announcement. On October 6, McCormick agreed to a request by Musk to postpone the trial to October 28 so Musk could finalize his
debt financing for the acquisition, adding that the trial would be rescheduled to November if the deal did not close by then. During this time, Musk deposited a $1 billion loan from his company
SpaceX, paying back the loan with interest the following month. On October 13, court filings revealed that Musk was being investigated by the
U.S. government for his conduct in the proposed buyout. Musk later stated that he believed Twitter's long-term value would exceed the price of $54.20 per share, which he considered an overpayment. On October 20,
The Washington Post reported that Musk intended to terminate 75 percent of Twitter's staff, and that Twitter executives were keen on selling the company to Musk so they could mitigate their planned payroll and infrastructure cuts. In an open letter, Twitter employees condemned Musk's intentions and warned of negative consequences on the future of Twitter.
Bloomberg News and the
Post further reported that officials in the
Biden administration were considering a
national security review of Musk's proposed acquisition and other ventures via the
Committee on Foreign Investment (CFIUS), with the possibility of
U.S. President Joe Biden blocking the purchase if need be; the
White House denied the reports. By October 21, both parties' bankers and lawyers were set to complete the paperwork for the acquisition by the end of the month, with the deal expected to close by then. The banks funding the acquisition were to hold the $13 billion worth of debt incurred as opposed to selling it. In a video call with banks who helped Musk fund the acquisition, Musk assured them he would complete the buyout by the deadline. Musk made a trip to Twitter's headquarters on October 26, tweeting a video of him jokingly carrying a kitchen sink at the site's lobby and changing his Twitter bio to "Chief Twit". Musk also told Twitter employees that while layoffs were still likely to happen, he did not intend to do so at the scale the
Post had previously reported. The next day, Musk wrote in an open letter to advertisers that Twitter would not become a "free-for-all hellscape", reiterating that his motives for the purchase were not based on greed but rather a desire to create "a common digital town square". He then asked Tesla engineers to meet with Twitter's product managers in order to assess the platform's
codebase, which was frozen until November 1.
Completion of purchase In the afternoon of October 27, Musk and Twitter closed the deal, with Musk tweeting "the bird is freed". Musk immediately became Twitter's new owner, summarily firing Agrawal,
chief financial officer (CFO)
Ned Segal, Gadde, and
general counsel Sean Edgett, with the executives escorted out of the company's headquarters by security. This move came to the surprise of many involved, who had expected Musk to allow the executives to voluntarily resign; Agrawal had prepared a draft of his
resignation letter before his access to his Twitter email account was cut off. According to
Walter Isaacson's biography
Elon Musk (2023), Musk "meticulously" changed his plans so "he could terminate their employment before their stock options would vest", seeking retribution for Agrawal's handling of the spambot incident. Agrawal, Segal, and Gadde were set to receive "
golden parachute" sums of $38.7 million, $25.4 million, and $12.5 million, respectively, but
The New York Times reported that Musk was unlikely to make the payments because the executives had been dismissed
for cause. According to the
Financial Times, Musk's justification for this assertion was that the company had been mismanaged, and the executives were "weighing their legal options over the decision". Dorsey retained his $1 billion ownership stake, and several other executives departed Twitter in the ensuing days. Musk assumed the position of CEO, merging the company with X Holdings and dissolving Twitter's board of directors. With this merger, Twitter ceased to be an independent company, with
X Corp. later created in March 2023 to house the company. Musk uses the title "Chief Twit" to refer to his position as CEO. A "war room" was established at Twitter, with Musk meeting with Spiro, Sacks, and others to discuss his next steps. According to
The New York Times, the group's two primary objectives were to reduce the size of Twitter's workforce and overhaul the platform's mobile app. Twitter employees were not formally informed of the change in management, with Musk originally said to be planning a town hall meeting with employees but ultimately not doing so. The next day, Twitter shares ceased trading in accordance with Musk's pledge to take the company private; the company's
stock ticker was
delisted from the
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on November 8.
Post-acquisition CEO of
X Corp., the successor to Twitter. Since becoming owner, Musk has enacted a series of changes, including overhauling
Twitter's verification system by requiring new applicants to purchase a
Twitter Blue subscription. Many Twitter staff members were directed to extend their working hours in order to meet Musk's deadlines for his desired changes to the platform. On November 4, Musk laid off roughly half of Twitter's workforce, and two weeks later, he issued an ultimatum to employees to commit to "extremely hardcore" work in order to realize Musk's vision of "Twitter 2.0", or leave. Hundreds of employees resigned in response. From the layoffs and resignations, the company went from close to 7,500 employees to approximately 1,500, a reduction of about 80%. Meanwhile, Musk began restoring previously banned accounts such as
Jordan Peterson,
Kathy Griffin,
The Babylon Bee, and
Donald Trump, while suspending
anti-fascist accounts at the urging of far-right figures, as well as accounts that parodied Musk. Musk also relaxed the platform's hate speech policies and removed its policy prohibiting
COVID-19 misinformation, resulting in an increase in hate speech. In December, Musk faced backlash after banning
ElonJet, a
Twitter bot account operated by
Jack Sweeney which tracked Musk's private jet in real-time using publicly accessible data. These protests intensified when Musk
suspended multiple journalists who had been covering the ElonJet incident. Days later, Musk conducted a Twitter poll asking users whether he should step down as CEO of Twitter, to which voters responded in the affirmative. Musk stated he would step down after selecting his replacement, and he was succeeded by
NBCUniversal advertising sales chair
Linda Yaccarino in June 2023. Musk's acquisition of Twitter was principally responsible for the development of
Threads, a social media platform which closely resembles Twitter, by rival company
Meta Platforms. Work began on the service in November 2022, and it was released on July 5, 2023, amidst continued backlash to changes to Twitter enacted by Musk and Yaccarino. In response, Twitter threatened to sue Meta over
intellectual property infringement. Agrawal, Segal, and Gadde filed a lawsuit against Twitter in April 2023, claiming that the company had failed to pay them for the legal fees they had incurred during their tenure. McCormick ruled in the executives' favor in October. In June, X Corp. sued Wachtell to recoup a portion of the $90 million fee the law firm had paid, accusing the firm of "unjust enrichment" for charging a bonus fee on successful completion of the acquisition when the agreement with prior Twitter management stipulated billing only on an hourly basis. The lawsuit failed. The Twitter app was rebranded as X in July, an unprecedented decision which has created confusion among users. In September, Musk failed to appear before the SEC in response to the
agency's investigation into his purchasing of Twitter stock the year prior, prompting a lawsuit.
The Wall Street Journal reported in October 2023 that the seven major banks that had provided Musk's acquisition loans failed to follow the
standard practice of quickly selling down their exposure to other banks due to a lack of appetite for the debt since Musk took over, instead expected to mark down the debt by at least 15 percent in order to sell it. The company's financial outlook improved in 2025, partly due to Musk's close relationship with
President Donald Trump and the platform's move away from an advertising-only model toward user subscriptions and artificial intelligence, leading to a revival in investor interest and successful refinancing of the remaining debt. By April 2025, banks had sold off the last of the debt related to the company at about 98 cents on the dollar, in what
Bloomberg News described as a remarkable turnaround. Earlier in March, Musk announced that
xAI, the AI company he founded two years earlier, would acquire X in an all-stock transaction for a total enterprise value of $45 billion, a billion more that what he paid in 2022. In August 2024, court documents revealed the names of the nearly 100 stakeholders who took part in the October 2022 takeover. Shareholders included including
Bill Ackman, Saudi Prince
Alwaleed bin Talal, Jack Dorsey, venture capital firms Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia Capital, (which both had joined a recent $6 billion funding round for Musk’s AI startup xAI). Also named were
8VC (led by Palantir co-founder
Joe Lonsdale) and Gigafund (co-founded by PayPal Mafia member
Luke Nosek and Stephen Oskoui, both also
Founders Fund alumni) — both investors in Musk’s other ventures like
The Boring Company — as well as
Scott Nolan, a former
SpaceX engineer and now partner at Peter Thiel's
Founders Fund.
Binance, which invested $500 million in Musk's 2022 takeover, and longtime Musk supporter
Cathie Wood are also among the names. The filing also includes lesser-known investors like Italian financial firm UnipolSai S.p.A. == Reactions ==