Pika (video generation)
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Last reviewed
May 8, 2026
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45 citations
Review status
Source-backed
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v5 ยท 5,940 words
Add missing citations, update stale details, or suggest a clearer explanation.
Pika is an artificial intelligence video generation platform developed by Pika Labs, Inc. that enables users to create and edit videos from text prompts, images, and existing video clips. Founded in April 2023 by Demi Guo and Chenlin Meng, both former PhD students in Stanford University's Artificial Intelligence Lab, Pika has grown from a Discord-based prototype into a full-featured web application with more than 11 million users. The company is headquartered in Palo Alto, California, and has raised $135 million in venture funding at a valuation that climbed from approximately $470 million at the Series B in mid-2024 to a reported $900 million in early 2026.
Pika's product lineup spans text-to-video generation, image-to-video conversion, video editing, creative visual effects (Pikaffects), lip synchronization, AI sound effects, and AI-driven performance animation. Its model versions have progressed from Pika 1.0 in November 2023 through Pika 2.5 in November 2025, with each release adding higher resolution, longer video duration, and new creative tools. Unlike rivals such as Sora and Veo, Pika has positioned itself less as a cinematic engine and more as a fast, social-first creative toolkit, optimized for short-form output destined for TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts.
During the winter of 2022 to 2023, Demi Guo and several classmates at Stanford participated in an AI Film Festival organized by Runway. Frustrated with the quality of the existing AI video tools available at the time, Guo and her fellow PhD student Chenlin Meng became convinced they could build something better. In April 2023, the two dropped out of Stanford's computer science PhD program and founded Pika Labs under the original working name "Mellis Labs" [1][2].
The team initially launched Pika as a free video generation tool accessible through Discord. The product quickly found traction among creative professionals and hobbyists. Within four months, the Pika Discord server had grown to over 500,000 members, and by early 2024 the community exceeded 700,000 [3]. The decision to launch on Discord rather than build a custom front end first turned out to be a smart shortcut: it gave the founders a captive audience for rapid iteration and let them tune the model on a stream of real-world prompts before they ever had to commit to product design.
On November 28, 2023, Pika formally launched Pika 1.0 alongside a dedicated web application at pika.art, moving beyond its Discord-only origins. Pika 1.0 introduced a new AI model capable of generating and editing videos in diverse visual styles including 3D animation, anime, cartoon, and cinematic realism. The platform supported both text-to-video and image-to-video generation, allowing users to create short video clips of up to a few seconds in length [4][5].
Simultaneously, the company announced that it had raised $55 million in total funding, including a $35 million Series A round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners. Other investors included Homebrew, Conviction Capital, SV Angel, and Ben's Bites, along with notable angel investors such as Quora founder Adam D'Angelo, former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman, Giphy co-founder Alex Chung, Andrej Karpathy, Hugging Face CEO Clem Delangue, Perplexity AI CEO Aravind Srinivas, and ElevenLabs CEO Mateusz Staniszewski [5][6]. The angel list reads like a who's-who of the post-2022 generative AI scene, which signaled to the broader market that an unproven company barely seven months old was already considered a credible bet.
In March 2024, Pika became one of the first generative video platforms to integrate AI-generated sound effects directly into its output. The feature works in two modes: contextual generation, where the model picks audio to match a clip produced from a text prompt, and prompted generation, where users describe specific sounds they want layered onto an existing clip. Toggling the Sound Effects option during creation produces ambient audio such as wind, footsteps, traffic, rain, and crowd noise that lines up with what is happening on screen [7][8].
The move addressed one of the most common complaints about early AI video tools: silent output that had to be hand-scored in a separate editor. While Pika's sound effects do not replace native audio generation in the way that Sora 2 or Veo 3 generate dialogue and music together with picture, they made Pika's clips noticeably more publishable straight out of the model.
Pika 1.5 launched on October 1, 2024, bringing significant improvements to video quality and introducing a novel category of creative tools called Pikaffects. The updated model produced more realistic human motion, including running, skateboarding, and flying, along with support for advanced camera movements such as Bullet Time, Vertigo, Dolly Left, and Crane Down [9][10].
Pikaffects became one of Pika's most distinctive features. These physics-defying visual effects allow users to apply dramatic transformations to any subject in a video with a single click. The initial set of effects included Explode, Melt, Crush, Inflate, Squish, and Cake-ify. The system uses AI to automatically identify the main subject in a video and apply the chosen transformation while maintaining consistent lighting, perspective, and motion [10][11].
Following the release of Pika 1.5, over five million new users joined the platform within a single month, bringing the total user base past 11 million. Major brands including Balenciaga, Fenty, and Vogue began using Pika's tools for creative social media advertisements [12]. Pikaffects also drove a wave of TikTok and Instagram trends, with clips of cake-ifying everyday objects and inflating cartoon characters racking up hundreds of millions of views and turning Pika into shorthand for absurd, viral-ready video edits.
In June 2024, Pika closed an $80 million Series B round led by Spark Capital, with participation from Greycroft, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Neo, Makers Fund, actor and investor Jared Leto, and Atlantic Records Chairman Craig Kallman. The round brought total funding to $135 million and valued the company between $470 million and $700 million, depending on the source [13][14]. Bloomberg reported the headline figure at $470 million while subsequent secondary-market data put the valuation closer to $700 million by mid-summer [14].
Leto's involvement was more than passive capital. His band, Thirty Seconds to Mars, integrated Pika-generated footage into the video screens behind their concert stage, becoming one of the first major touring acts to lean on the model for live visual production [15]. The connection helped position Pika inside the music video and live entertainment ecosystems before any direct enterprise sales effort.
Pika 2.0 launched on December 13, 2024, just days after OpenAI released Sora to the public. The flagship addition was Scene Ingredients, a modular system that lets users upload custom elements (characters, objects, backgrounds) and combine them with text prompts for much more granular control over video composition. For example, a user could upload a photo of a person and a photo of a cat, then instruct the AI to generate a scene where the two interact [12][16].
Pika 2.0 also improved text-to-prompt alignment, making the model more responsive to detailed descriptions, and delivered smoother motion rendering with more believable physics simulation [16]. The launch was widely read as Pika's response to Sora; rather than try to match OpenAI on raw cinematic fidelity, the company doubled down on tools that gave creators direct compositional control over their inputs.
Pika 2.1 was announced on January 27, 2025, and focused heavily on realism. The model introduced 1080p resolution output, a major upgrade from earlier versions, along with crystal-clear details and smoother, more lifelike motion. Generated videos could reach up to 12 seconds in length [17][18].
This version also introduced two important creative tools:
Pikaswaps launched on February 23, 2025, and Pikadditions on February 10, 2025 [19][20].
Pika 2.2 was released on February 27, 2025. The headline feature was Pikaframes, a keyframe transition system that lets users upload a starting image and an ending image, with the AI generating the video transition between them. Pikaframes supports transitions of 1 to 10 seconds per pair of frames, and by chaining up to five keyframes, users can create videos up to 25 seconds long [21][22].
Other improvements in Pika 2.2 included:
In September 2025, Pika became an officially integrated third-party model inside Adobe's Firefly Boards, which had relaunched globally that month. Pika 2.2 text-to-video sat alongside models from Luma AI, Google, and Runway in the same canvas, letting Adobe customers ideate with multiple video models without switching apps [23]. The integration had been quietly available to a smaller audience since July 2025; the September launch turned it into a generally available B2B2C distribution channel that handed Pika access to Adobe's enterprise and professional creative customer base without requiring direct enterprise sales work.
In October 2025, Pika launched a standalone social video app for iOS, designed as a TikTok-like platform where users generate and share AI-created short videos. The app introduced a feature called Predictive Video, which allows users to upload a selfie and type a simple prompt (for example, "make me a rock star" or "I'm giving a TED Talk"), after which the AI infers the intent and produces a complete video with a script, music, dance moves, background, lighting, camera angles, and visual effects [24].
The app also incorporated Pikaformance, an audio-driven performance model that synchronizes facial animation to audio input. Users upload a still image and an audio track, and the model generates lip-synced video with realistic micro-expressions, eyebrow movements, and head motion. Pika claims Pikaformance can generate videos of any length in approximately six seconds [25][26].
Fortune coverage at the time framed the app as Pika's bet on Gen Z and Gen Alpha, cohorts that have grown up on short-form video and are comfortable expressing themselves through remix templates rather than original camerawork [24]. The launch coincided with Pika reorienting its entire product strategy around the consumer social use case rather than competing on cinematic fidelity.
Pika 2.5 was released in November 2025, arriving after a roughly nine-month gap during which several rival video models pushed forward aggressively. The release was framed less as a brand-new architecture and more as a quality and consistency upgrade on top of the existing 2.x line, with Pika Labs marketing it as the model for cinematic short-form content [27][28].
Key improvements in Pika 2.5 include:
Reviewers consistently described Pika 2.5 as a meaningful step up from 2.2 but still behind Sora 2, Runway Gen-4.5, and Veo 3 on raw photoreal output. Where 2.5 holds its own is speed, social-first features, and the cost-to-quality ratio for stylized clips. The model continues to ship without native audio for full dialogue and music, a recurring frustration for users who compare it to peers that fold sound and picture into a single generation pass [27][29].
Demi Guo earned a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics and a Master of Science in Computer Science from Harvard University. During her undergraduate years she interned at Microsoft and Google. She joined Facebook AI Research (FAIR) as one of its youngest full-time employees before enrolling in Stanford's computer science PhD program in 2021. At Stanford, her research focused on the intersection of natural language processing and graphics [1][2].
Guo also competed in the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI), winning a silver medal in 2015. Mentors she met through this competition later helped secure Pika's first meetings with investors [2]. She was 26 when Pika closed its $55 million Series A, making her one of the youngest first-time founders to lead a multi-hundred-million-dollar generative AI company.
Chenlin Meng pursued her PhD at Stanford under the supervision of Stefano Ermon, a leading researcher in generative models. During her doctoral studies, Meng authored over 30 papers in three years and accumulated more than 23,000 citations on Google Scholar [30][31].
Her most influential contribution is the paper "Denoising Diffusion Implicit Models" (DDIM), published at ICLR 2021, which showed how to reduce the number of denoising steps required for diffusion models from over 1,000 to under 100. DDIM became a standard component in systems such as DALL-E 2, Imagen, and Stable Diffusion [30]. She also co-authored SDEdit (ICLR 2022), an image editing method using stochastic differential equations that has been broadly adopted in generative AI frameworks [30]. The DDIM and SDEdit lineage gives Pika unusually deep in-house expertise on the sampling and editing methods that underpin most modern diffusion-based video systems.
Pika Labs has not published a detailed technical paper describing its proprietary model architecture. Based on publicly available information and the academic backgrounds of its founders, the following is known or can be reasonably inferred.
Pika's video generation models are built on a latent diffusion framework, a class of generative models that operate in a compressed representation space rather than directly on pixels. This approach, popularized by Stable Diffusion and related systems, enables the generation of high-resolution content with reduced computational cost [32].
The system likely incorporates transformer-based temporal modeling to maintain frame-to-frame consistency and natural motion flow across video sequences. This is consistent with the broader industry trend toward diffusion transformer (DiT) architectures for video generation, as used by competitors including Sora and Runway Gen-3 [32][33].
For multimodal input processing, Pika employs components similar to CLIP for encoding text descriptions and image features into shared high-dimensional representations. This enables the platform to handle text-to-video, image-to-video, and hybrid input modes within the same pipeline [32].
The training data consists of video-text pairs, though Pika has not disclosed the specific datasets or data sources used. The founders' academic work at Stanford on sampling methods, diffusion model distillation, and loss function design likely influenced the model's training approach [30][31]. The company has not been named in any of the major copyright-related AI lawsuits that proliferated through 2024 and 2025 against OpenAI, Anthropic, Suno, and others, though it has not publicly licensed its training corpus either, which leaves the underlying data provenance an open question.
Users enter a text prompt describing the desired video, and Pika generates a short clip matching the description. The system supports various visual styles, from photorealistic to anime and 3D animation. As of Pika 2.5, text-to-video generation produces clips of up to 10 seconds in 1080p resolution, with a Turbo mode on paid plans that further reduces generation time at the cost of fewer credits [21][27].
A still image can be uploaded and animated into a video. The AI interprets the content of the image and adds natural motion, camera movement, and environmental effects. This feature is useful for bringing photographs, illustrations, or AI-generated images to life [4]. It is also the workflow most aligned with the Pika social app, where users routinely upload selfies as the seed for a Predictive Video.
Introduced with Pika 2.0, Scene Ingredients (later called Pikascenes) lets users upload multiple custom elements, including characters, objects, wardrobe items, and backgrounds. These elements are composed into a scene according to a text prompt, giving creators modular control over video composition without relying on a single monolithic prompt [12][16].
Pikaffects are one-click creative transformations that apply physics-defying effects to video subjects. The AI automatically identifies the main subject and applies the effect while maintaining visual coherence. The available effects include:
| Effect | Description |
|---|---|
| Explode | Disintegrates the subject into fragments |
| Melt | Liquefies the subject into a puddle |
| Crush | Compresses the subject as if with a hydraulic press |
| Inflate | Expands the subject as if filled with air |
| Squish | Flattens the subject with applied pressure |
| Cake-ify | Transforms the subject into a realistic cake, complete with a slicing animation |
| Crumble | Breaks the subject apart into crumbling pieces |
| Dissolve | Fades the subject away particle by particle |
| Deflate | Shrinks the subject as if air is being released |
| Ta-da | Applies a dramatic reveal or transformation effect |
Pikaffects launched with Pika 1.5 in October 2024 and have been expanded with additional effects in subsequent updates [9][10][11]. They are also available through a standalone iOS app, Pikaffects by Pika, that lets users apply effects directly to phone photos and videos without entering the broader Pika web app [11].
Pikaswaps allows users to select and replace a specific object or element in a video with something entirely different. The replacement is rendered with matched lighting, shadows, and motion. Pikadditions works in the opposite direction, inserting new elements into an existing video without altering the original scene composition [19][20]. Both tools were promoted again as signature features of the Pika 2.5 release in November 2025, with the company noting tighter integration between the two and the underlying generation model [27].
Introduced with Pika 2.2, Pikaframes lets users define keyframes by uploading start and end images. The AI generates the transition between them, creating smooth animations that can range from 1 to 10 seconds per pair. Up to five keyframes can be chained for videos totaling up to 25 seconds [21][22].
Pika's lip sync feature, powered in part by ElevenLabs voice technology, allows users to add spoken dialogue to video characters. Users can type text or upload audio, select a voice style, and the system animates the character's mouth, eyes, and facial expressions to match the audio. The feature supports both realistic and animated character styles [34].
Pika also offers AI sound effects, introduced in March 2024 and steadily expanded since. Users can either toggle automatic contextual sound generation during a clip's creation, in which case the model decides what audio fits the visuals, or write a separate sound prompt to layer specific noises (waves, footsteps, traffic, ambient crowd noise) onto an existing clip [7][8]. The combination of lip sync, sound effects, and Pikaformance makes Pika one of the more complete generative video platforms when it comes to audio, even though it still relies on layered post-processing rather than the unified audio-video generation found in Sora 2, Veo 3, and Kling.
Pikaformance is an audio-driven performance model that goes beyond basic lip sync. Given a still portrait and an audio track, it generates full facial animation including lip shape, jaw movement, eye blinks, eyebrow raises, and head tilts. The model can produce videos of any length in approximately six seconds and supports speaking, singing, rapping, and other vocal performances [25][26].
Pika offers a set of predefined camera movements that users can apply to their generated videos, including Bullet Time (360-degree freeze-frame rotation), Vertigo (simultaneous zoom and dolly for a disorienting effect), Dolly Left/Right, Crane Up/Down, and Dash Camera perspectives [9]. With Pika 2.5, the company emphasized that camera direction had been promoted to a first-class control surface, with focal-length cues and named moves like push-ins and rolls reading more reliably than they did in 2.2 [27].
Predictive Video, launched inside the Pika social iOS app in October 2025, is the company's most aggressive attempt at a no-prompt-engineering experience. The user uploads a selfie or short video and types a one-line wish ("make me a rock star," "give a TED Talk," "sing in Japanese"), and the system infers the rest, generating script, music, dance moves, lighting, camera angles, and visual effects automatically [24]. It is the clearest signal that Pika sees the future of consumer video generation as conversational rather than prompt-driven.
The following table summarizes the progression of Pika's model versions and their primary capabilities.
| Version | Release Date | Max Duration | Max Resolution | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pika 1.0 | November 28, 2023 | ~3 seconds | Standard definition | Text-to-video, image-to-video, web app launch |
| Pika 1.5 | October 1, 2024 | 5 seconds | Up to 720p | Pikaffects, advanced camera movements, improved human motion |
| Pika 2.0 | December 13, 2024 | 5 seconds | Up to 720p | Scene Ingredients, improved prompt alignment, better physics |
| Pika 2.1 | January 27, 2025 | 12 seconds | 1080p | Pikaswaps, Pikadditions, 1080p resolution, lip sync |
| Pika 2.2 | February 27, 2025 | 10 seconds (25s with Pikaframes) | 1080p | Pikaframes keyframe transitions, optimized credit usage, Adobe Firefly integration |
| Pika 2.5 | November 2025 | 10 seconds | 1080p | Cinematic short-form quality, stronger identity consistency, faster generation, refreshed Pikadditions and Pikaswaps |
Pika operates on a credit-based subscription model with three paid tiers plus a free plan. Pricing below reflects the structure published in early 2026; Pika offers an annual billing option that lands at roughly a 20 percent discount versus monthly billing.
| Plan | Monthly (annual billing) | Monthly (month-to-month) | Monthly Credits | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | $0 | ~80 | Basic generation, Pika watermark, no commercial use |
| Standard | $8 | $10 | 700 | All resolutions, watermark-free downloads, commercial use, all models |
| Pro | $28 | $35 | 2,300 | Faster generation, all features, priority rendering, credit rollover |
| Fancy | $76 | $95 | 6,000 | Premium speed, top tier for bulk generation, credit rollover |
Free and Standard credits expire at the end of each billing cycle, while Pro and Fancy plans roll unused credits over to the next cycle. Additional credit packs can be purchased separately for users who burn through their allotment mid-cycle [35][36].
Pika offers API access through two channels. The original Pika API (supporting 1.0 and 1.5 features) was available through a partnership-based, invite-only process geared toward enterprise customers and B2B integrations [37].
In December 2025, Pika announced that its 2.2 models are accessible through fal.ai's inference platform, providing a self-serve API with standard REST endpoints, a usage dashboard, and pay-per-use billing. The fal.ai integration exposes text-to-video, image-to-video, Pikascenes, and Pikaframes capabilities to developers building applications that incorporate AI video generation [37][38]. The fal.ai partnership effectively replaced the older invite-only flow for most builders, leaving the bespoke API channel for true enterprise deployments.
Pika's reception in the press and developer community has split along a fairly consistent line: reviewers praise the speed, the creative effects, and the cost-to-quality ratio, while criticizing the realism, length limits, and absence of native audio when stacked against Sora 2, Runway Gen-4.5, Kling, and Veo 3.
TechCrunch covered both the original $55 million Series A in November 2023 and the rollout of Pika 2 in late 2024, framing the company as the most consumer-friendly entrant in the early AI video wave [5]. VentureBeat ran extended pieces on Pika 1.5, the lip sync addition, the Pika 2.0 launch in the wake of Sora, and the broader Adobe Firefly integration story [9][12][34]. Bloomberg's reporting on the Series B emphasized the celebrity capital and the music-industry connections rather than the underlying technology [14][15].
Reviewer consensus on Pika 2.5 has been more mixed than headline-friendly. The general view is that Pika 2.5 produces noticeably better motion and consistency than 2.2, but still trails the very top models on photoreal fidelity. One review summarized Pika as "a short-form video effects tool disguised as a video generator," genuinely great for five-second stylized clips for TikTok, Reels, or memes, but a poor fit for cinematic quality, photorealistic output, consistent character identity, or anything longer than ten seconds without burning a lot of credits [29][39]. Reddit threads echo the same themes, with the lack of a single-pass video plus audio generation flow as the most common gripe.
What Pika has clearly won on is virality. Pikaffects in particular drove a wave of TikTok and Instagram trends, with cake-ifying, melting, and inflating clips going viral repeatedly through late 2024 and into 2025. The Pikaffects suite is widely cited as the single biggest reason creators choose Pika over peers, since no other major model has shipped a comparable effects library [29][39].
Pika operates in a crowded and fast-moving AI video generation market. The following table compares Pika with its main competitors as of early 2026.
| Platform | Developer | Max Duration | Max Resolution | Native Audio | Notable Strengths |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pika 2.5 | Pika Labs | 10s (25s with Pikaframes) | 1080p | No (lip sync via ElevenLabs, separate sound effects) | Pikaffects, Scene Ingredients, fast generation (60 to 90 seconds), social-oriented |
| Sora 2 | OpenAI | 25 seconds | 1080p | Yes | Physics accuracy, synchronized dialogue and SFX, Characters feature, social app |
| Runway Gen-4.5 | Runway AI | ~10 seconds | 1080p | No | Ranked #1 on Artificial Analysis for visual quality, professional editing workflows, Lionsgate partnership |
| Kling 2.6 | Kuaishou | Up to 2 minutes | 1080p | Yes | Simultaneous audio-visual generation, strong complex motion, #1 for image-to-video on Artificial Analysis |
| Veo 3.1 | Google DeepMind | Variable | Up to 4K | Yes | Native 4K output, character consistency, vertical video, available through Gemini Advanced |
| Hailuo 02 | MiniMax | Variable | 1080p | Yes | NCR architecture, ranked second on Artificial Analysis, competitive pricing |
Pika's primary competitive advantage lies in its speed and creative effects tooling. Generation times for Pika 2.5 average 60 to 90 seconds for typical 1080p clips, making it three to six times faster than most competitors (Runway lands at one to three minutes, Sora at five to eight minutes for comparable clips). Its Pikaffects and Scene Ingredients features offer creative manipulation capabilities that are not directly replicated by other platforms. However, in terms of raw visual quality and photorealism, Sora 2, Runway Gen-4.5, and Veo 3 generally produce more polished output for cinematic and live-action styles [33][39][40].
Pika is better positioned for quick social media content, stylized video, and creative experimentation, while platforms like Runway serve professional post-production workflows and Sora targets longer-form narrative content [39]. The Adobe Firefly integration in late 2025 partly closes the professional gap by putting Pika in the same canvas as Runway and Luma for Adobe customers, though it does not change the underlying differences in output fidelity.
Pika's revenue was estimated at $7.6 million in 2024, generated by a team of approximately 48 employees. Projected annual revenue for 2026 exceeds $130 million, driven by a combination of consumer subscriptions and enterprise contracts. Enterprise clients are reported to contribute roughly 40% of total revenue [41][42].
Third-party reports place Pika's user base above 11 million as of late 2025, with one source citing roughly 120,000 monthly active users on the core platform and an annual growth rate above 85 percent [42][43]. The Pika social iOS app, launched in October 2025, has not had its monthly active user count published, but it climbed quickly in App Store rankings during its launch month and has been the company's primary consumer-acquisition channel since [24].
Valuation reports have moved upward since the Series B. The initial $470 million figure published by Bloomberg at the close of the round in June 2024 climbed to roughly $700 million on secondary markets later that summer [13][14]. Industry analyses through early 2026 cite a valuation around $900 million, with some commentators projecting a $1.5 billion valuation by the end of 2026 if revenue growth and the Adobe Firefly distribution channel hold up [42]. Secondary-market platforms have offered Pika shares at varying implied valuations, with one estimate near $622 million reflecting a less optimistic snapshot during a quieter period [42].
As of 2025, Pika Labs employs a small team (estimates range from 48 to 50 people) based in Palo Alto, California, at 849 High Street. The company emphasizes a lean organizational structure with a focus on research talent [41][44]. The deliberately small headcount has been a recurring theme in press coverage, especially in contrast to OpenAI and Google's far larger video teams.
Pika's distribution strategy in 2025 leaned heavily on three relationships:
In addition, brands including Balenciaga, Fenty, and Vogue have used Pika tools for social campaigns, and Thirty Seconds to Mars used Pika-generated visuals as concert backdrops, giving the company an unusual on-stage presence at major touring events [12][15].
Reports surfaced in mid-2025 that Meta explored a potential acquisition of Pika Labs for approximately $500 million, with discussions held around July 2025. No deal has been publicly confirmed as of early 2026, and Pika has continued to operate independently while raising its valuation through fundraising and growth rather than a sale [45].
Pika has multiple mobile applications available on Apple's App Store, each targeting a different slice of the creative workflow:
| App | Focus | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pikaffects by Pika | Apply Pikaffects to photos and videos | Standalone, single-purpose app for the viral effects library [11] |
| Pika - Social AI Video | Full social video creation and feed | Launched October 2025, includes Predictive Video and Pikaformance [24] |
| AI Video Trend by Pika | Trend templates and quick remixes | Targets fast-turnaround social formats with prebuilt trend patterns |
As of early 2026, all of Pika's first-party apps are iOS-only, with an Android version reportedly in development but not yet released. The company has positioned the iPhone-only strategy as a deliberate Gen Z and Gen Alpha play, given those cohorts' iPhone adoption and short-form video usage patterns [24].