Elon Musk's social media site X, formerly known as Twitter, has set a date to officially shut down its old headquarters in San Francisco, according to a report.
A familiar formula Fortune telling Axe informed employees via email on Thursday that the Market Street office would be closed on Sept. 13, and the outlet reported that date falls on Friday.
FOX Business has reached out to Axe for comment.
Musk announced last month that he would move the global headquarters of X and SpaceX out of California after Governor Gavin Newsom signed a bill preventing schools from informing parents about their children’s gender identity.
Musk said at the time that SpaceX's headquarters would move to Austin, Texas, while he also announced that SpaceX would move its headquarters from Hawthorne, California to Starbase, Texas.
He described the gender identity law as the “last straw” and attributed the move to “this law and many others that came before it, which attacked both families and companies.”
Musk has been critical of a number of California policies over the past several years as he moves his companies to business-friendly Texas.
Tesla's CEO officially moved the electric vehicle giant's global headquarters from California to Austin in late 2021, following tensions with the California government over strict COVID-19 restrictions.
FOX Business's Eric Ravel and Joshua Nelson contributed to this report.