OpenAI is shutting down Sora, and it’s taking a billion-dollar Disney partnership down with it.
On March 27, OpenAI announced that its AI video generation app will close on April 26, 2026, with the Sora API following on September 24. The company cited the need to redirect computing resources toward robotics and autonomous software systems — a dramatic pivot away from creative AI tools and toward enterprise infrastructure.
The financial picture tells the real story. Throughout its entire lifespan, Sora generated approximately $2.1 million in in-app purchases — a rounding error for a company valued at $730 billion. Meanwhile, the platform was reportedly losing around $1 million per day in computing costs. User engagement had been declining steadily, dropping from roughly 1 million active users at peak to under 500,000. For a company preparing for a potential IPO, the math simply didn’t work.
But the most dramatic casualty is the Disney deal. Just three months ago, Disney had agreed to a groundbreaking partnership: a $1 billion investment in OpenAI and a three-year licensing agreement that would have allowed Sora to generate user-prompted videos featuring more than 200 characters from Disney, Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars. It was supposed to be the moment AI video generation went mainstream.
None of it materialized. No money actually changed hands before the partnership dissolved. And in what multiple reports describe as a stunning breach of business etiquette, Disney learned about the Sora shutdown less than an hour before the public announcement. A Disney spokesperson kept it diplomatic, saying the company respects OpenAI’s decision to shift its priorities, but the damage to the relationship is reportedly significant.
For existing Sora users, the situation remains unclear. OpenAI has promised to provide timelines and data export details but hasn’t specified exactly how the transition will work. Both the public app and professional video tools are being discontinued. Notably, image generation in ChatGPT remains unaffected — this is specifically about video.
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The shutdown also raises questions about the viability of AI video generation as a business. Sora launched with enormous hype as one of the most impressive AI demos of its era. But converting that hype into sustainable revenue proved impossible. The computing costs of generating video are dramatically higher than text or image generation, and users weren’t willing to pay enough to offset them.
OpenAI is clearly betting that its future lies in coding tools, enterprise software, and autonomous agents — areas with clearer paths to revenue at scale. Sora, for all its technical brilliance, was a creative tool in search of a business model. Its death is a reminder that in AI, being impressive and being profitable are two very different things.