Financial filings show a dramatic collapse in local revenues and profits for Elon Musk’s social media platform after brands scaled back spending over moderation concerns
Revenues for X’s United Kingdom operations tumbled by nearly sixty per cent in the year to December 2024, according to the company’s latest financial figures, as major advertisers reduced or withdrew spending amid mounting concerns about content safety, moderation and brand reputation.
The steep decline has underscored serious commercial challenges facing the platform, formerly known as Twitter, under the ownership of
Elon Musk, with advertisers citing unease about the environment in which their brands appear.
Accounts filed at Companies House show that X’s UK revenues fell from £69.1 million in 2023 to £28.9 million in 2024, a drop of 58.3 per cent compared with the prior year.
Pre-tax profits also contracted sharply, shrinking from £2.2 million to just £767,000 over the same period.
Observers say the figures reflect a sustained downturn in local advertising demand and broader concerns among corporate clients over the platform’s content policies and effectiveness of moderation.
X attributed the revenue fall principally to a reduction in spend from large brand advertisers who reconsidered or scaled back campaigns on the platform because of worries about brand safety, reputation and content moderation.
Company statements accompanying the accounts said X is investing in additional safety tools, platform moderation and advertiser education to rebuild trust and address these issues.
The collapse in UK revenue comes amid broader controversies over content generated by the company’s artificial intelligence tool, Grok, which was widely criticised after it was used to create sexually explicit and violent imagery.
In response to regulatory pressure and advertiser unease, X restricted the image generation features of Grok to paying subscribers, a move intended to limit misuse.
The situation has sparked debate among UK policymakers and regulators about enforcement of online safety standards and the responsibilities of platforms hosting user-generated and AI-derived content.
The downturn has also been reflected in workforce reductions in the UK, where X’s headcount has shrunk significantly since Musk’s acquisition of the platform.
Despite ongoing investments in brand safety tooling and platform improvements, the sharp revenue drop highlights the commercial repercussions of content and moderation challenges for digital advertising markets and the continued efforts X faces in restoring advertiser confidence in a highly competitive environment.