Sora Is Gone - OpenAI Spent $15M a Day on an App That Made $2.1M Total

On March 24, 2026, OpenAI posted a single sentence on X: "We're saying goodbye to the Sora app". No long blog post. No advance warning. Just a brief goodbye to one of the most hyped AI products of the last two years.
 

Sora is Gone

 

The shutdown blindsided creators, developers, and Hollywood studios that had built workflows around it. Here's the full story - and the numbers that made the outcome almost inevitable.

The Two-Stage Shutdown Timeline

OpenAI confirmed a phased wind-down rather than an instant cutoff. The web and app versions of Sora go dark on April 26, 2026. The Sora API remains accessible until September 24, 2026, after which all user data is permanently deleted.

If you have content in your Sora library, export it now. OpenAI says it may offer a final export window after the April deadline - but nothing is guaranteed. Don't wait.

Action Required
Log in to your Sora library and use the Bulk Export option to download your videos. Once servers go offline, content is gone permanently.

The Real Reasons Sora Failed

1. The Math Never Worked

This is the core of the story. According to reporting from Forbes and analysis by Cantor Fitzgerald, Sora was burning an estimated $15 million per day in inference costs at peak usage - roughly $1.30 per 10-second generated clip at scale.

Against that, Sora's estimated total lifetime revenue came in at around $2.1 million. Annualized, the cost run rate approached $5.4 billion.

That's not a product struggling to grow - that's a structural impossibility.

2. Users Didn't Stick Around

The app hit number one in the iOS App Store's Photo & Video category within a day of launch in September 2025. By early 2026, downloads had dropped 66% from their November peak.

Retention after 30 days sat below 8% for individual Pro users paying $200/month.

The novelty pulled people in - slow generation times (3-8 minutes per 10-second clip), physics glitches, and object permanence failures pushed them back out.

3. The Disney Deal Collapsed the Same Day

In December 2025, Disney signed a landmark deal to bring over 200 characters - Mickey Mouse, Star Wars icons, Pixar leads - into the Sora ecosystem, paired with a $1 billion stake in OpenAI (in stock warrants, not cash).

The deal was entirely unwound on March 24, 2026 - the same day as the shutdown announcement.

Disney stated it "respects OpenAI's decision to exit the video generation business." The partnership lasted under 90 days from announcement to collapse.

4. Competitors Caught Up and Passed It

Sora held a first-mover advantage through most of 2025. By Q1 2026, that advantage was gone. Google Veo 3.1, Runway Gen-4, and Kling 3.0 all matched or exceeded Sora's output quality - while delivering results in under 90 seconds versus Sora's 3-8 minute waits.

At $200/month, Sora's price-to-performance ratio became impossible to defend against faster, cheaper alternatives.

5. OpenAI Is Pivoting Hard Toward Enterprise and AGI

The shutdown announcement came the same day OpenAI confirmed pretraining on a new model codenamed "Spud" - described by Sam Altman as something that "can meaningfully accelerate the overall economy." The Sora team is being folded into world simulation research for robotics.

OpenAI is also preparing for an expected IPO and has watched rival Anthropic gain significant ground by focusing entirely on text and code generation.

Killing a $15M/day consumer product makes sense on the path to profitability.

6. Deepfakes and Copyright Created Non-Stop Pressure

Sora launched into immediate controversy. Users generated realistic videos of Michael Jackson, Martin Luther King Jr., and Mister Rogers in unauthorized scenarios.

OpenAI was forced into reactive crackdowns. Advocacy groups, actors' unions, and IP lawyers all lined up against it.

That pressure never let up - and it made enterprise partnerships like the Disney deal structurally difficult to sustain at scale.

What This Means for AI Video Tools

Sora's exit doesn't kill AI video - it changes who plays in the space. The survivors are platforms with better economics, faster output, and enterprise-grade safety guarantees.

For creators already invested in local AI video workflows, desktop tools remain the more stable option. Topaz Video AI handles upscaling, frame interpolation, and enhancement locally - no cloud subscription, no shutdown risk.

REAL Video Enhancer is a free open-source alternative with RIFE-based frame interpolation and SPAN upscaling that runs entirely on your hardware.

For processing and converting the video you've already exported from Sora before the deadline, HandBrake handles format conversion efficiently, and VLC Media Player plays back any format you throw at it without needing extra codecs.

If you're running into playback issues with exported files, installing the K-Lite Codec Pack solves most compatibility problems instantly.

Key Dates to Remember

  • March 24, 2026 - Official shutdown announcement. Disney deal ends the same day.
  • April 26, 2026 - Sora web and app go offline. Export your content before this date.
  • September 24, 2026 - Sora API shuts down permanently. All data deleted.

Sora launched as the most exciting consumer AI product in years. It closed as a case study in the brutal economics of generative AI at scale. The technology worked - the business model didn't.

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