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AppsCreatorsTechTikTok

TikTok Notes shuts down May 2025, making way for Lemon8

TikTok Notes, the photo app launched in 2024, is closing.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Apr 4, 2025, 6:59 AM EDT
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App Store screenshot previews of the TikTok Notes app.
Image: TikTok
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Well, folks, it looks like TikTok is pulling the plug on one of its lesser-known experiments. TikTok Notes, the photo-sharing app that was supposed to take on Instagram, is officially kaput as of May 8, 2025. If you’re scratching your head wondering, “Wait, TikTok had a photo app?”—don’t worry, you’re not alone. This one didn’t exactly set the world on fire, and now TikTok’s waving goodbye to it with a casual, “It was fun while it lasted.”

In a notification sent out to its users, the TikTok Notes team broke the news: come May 8, the app will stop working, and all its features will vanish into the digital ether. “This decision was not made lightly,” they wrote, which is corporate-speak for “Yeah, we tried, but it didn’t stick.” Launched just a year ago in April 2024, Notes was TikTok’s attempt to carve out a slice of Instagram’s photo-sharing pie. It rolled out in limited testing in places like Australia and Canada, letting users post pics with captions and scroll through a “For You” feed tailored to their tastes. Sound familiar? Yep, it was basically Instagram with a TikTok twist.

TikTok Notes discontinuation notice
Image: TikTok

But here’s the kicker: instead of mourning the loss, TikTok’s pointing users toward another app in its family tree—Lemon8. If Notes was the awkward cousin who never quite fit in, Lemon8’s the cool sibling who’s been quietly waiting in the wings. Owned by ByteDance, the same Chinese tech giant behind TikTok, Lemon8 is a photo-and-video platform with a vibe that’s more lifestyle-focused—think beauty tips, foodie pics, fashion inspo, travel snaps, and cute pet videos. It’s less about viral dance challenges and more about curated, aesthetic vibes.

“We’re excited to bring the feedback from TikTok Notes to Lemon8 as we continue building a dedicated space for our community to share and experience photo content, designed to complement and enhance the TikTok experience,” a TikTok spokesperson told TechCrunch. Translation: they’re taking whatever they learned from Notes’ short-lived run and pouring it into Lemon8, hoping it’ll stick this time.

So why’d Notes flop? TikTok’s not spilling the beans outright, but the writing’s on the wall. It likely didn’t pull in the crowds the way they hoped. TechCrunch reports that Lemon8, by comparison, had around 12.5 million monthly active users worldwide as of December 2024—not a massive number, but enough to suggest it’s got more traction than Notes ever did. Maybe people just didn’t need another photo app when Instagram’s already king of that hill, or maybe TikTok’s audience is too hooked on short-form video to care about stills.

Lemon8’s been around longer than you might think—it first popped up in Japan back in 2020 before spreading to other markets like the U.S. and Southeast Asia. It’s got a Pinterest-meets-Instagram feel, with users posting slideshows and photo collections heavy on lifestyle content. Think of it as a digital mood board where you can scroll through two feeds: one for folks you follow and a “For You” page that guesses what you’re into. Sound familiar? Yeah, ByteDance loves that formula.

This isn’t the first time ByteDance has tried to nudge its TikTok fans toward Lemon8. Back in November 2024, with a potential U.S. TikTok ban looming, the company rolled out a feature letting users log into Lemon8 with their TikTok accounts and cross-share photos between the two. It was a slick move—keep the creators hooked into the ByteDance ecosystem in case TikTok got the axe. And while the ban drama’s still playing out (more on that in a sec), Lemon8’s been quietly building its own little empire.

Speaking of that ban, it’s worth a quick detour. TikTok’s been walking a tightrope in the U.S. for a while now, with lawmakers fretting over national security risks tied to ByteDance’s Chinese roots. Last year, Congress passed a law giving ByteDance until January 19, 2025, to sell TikTok to a non-Chinese owner or face a shutdown. Lemon8 got caught up in that mess too—since it’s also ByteDance-owned, it was yanked from U.S. app stores alongside TikTok earlier this year when the deadline hit. But here’s the twist: just as the clock was ticking down, President-elect Donald Trump (yep, he’s back in the game) hinted he might step in to save TikTok. No ban’s been lifted yet, but as of now, both apps are back in play, and TikTok’s using the moment to redirect Notes users to Lemon8.

Related /

  • ‘TikTok America,’ Amazon, and the wild race to buy TikTok

So what’s next for Lemon8? It’s got potential, but it’s not without challenges. For one, it’s stepping into a crowded ring—Instagram’s got over 2 billion users worldwide, and Pinterest isn’t exactly hurting for fans either. Lemon8’s 12.5 million monthly users are a drop in the bucket by comparison. To make it work, ByteDance will need to lean hard into what makes Lemon8 different: that lifestyle niche, the slick integration with TikTok, and maybe a few creator perks to sweeten the deal. They’ve already shown they’re not afraid to pay influencers to hype it up—back in 2023, TechCrunch caught wind of ByteDance shelling out cash to TikTok creators to seed Lemon8 with content. Sneaky? Sure. Effective? We’ll see.

For TikTok Notes users, the clock’s ticking. If you’ve got pics you want to save, better download them before May 8 rolls around. After that, it’s Lemon8 or bust—at least until ByteDance cooks up its next big idea. As for the rest of us, this whole saga’s a reminder of how fast the social media game moves. One day you’re launching a shiny new app, the next you’re scrapping it for parts.


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