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A group of 48 China-based iOS developers have filed an antitrust complaint against Apple with the country's market regulator over the App Store's commission rates, the South China Morning Post reports.

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The developers sent an open letter to China's State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), alleging that Apple failed to deliver on a promise to offer the lowest commission rate to the Chinese market. The group asked the SAMR to investigate and penalize Apple for allegedly abusing its market dominance to impose "unfair and excessively high" costs on local developers.

Apple currently charges a 25% commission on paid apps and in-app purchases in China, down from 30% after a cut made in March. The commission on subscription renewals, along with the rate for qualified developers in Apple's Small Business and Mini Apps Partner programs, was lowered to 12% from 15% at the same time.

The complaint follows a series of similar challenges to Apple's China App Store policies dating back nearly a decade. A Beijing law firm filed a complaint in 2017 over app removals and high fees, a Chinese consumer sued over App Store fees in 2021 (a claim ultimately rejected by a Shanghai court in 2024), and another Chinese law firm sued again in 2025.

The 48 developers point to Apple's recent moves elsewhere as evidence the company can do better. Apple lowered its Brazil commission last week to between 10% and 21% of a transaction, plus a 5% processing fee, while also letting Brazilian developers distribute iOS apps through other app marketplaces for a 5% fee. Apple made comparable adjustments in Japan late last year.

The developers want more than Brazil-style pricing. They argue that allowing third-party app stores in China, as Apple already does in the European Union under the Digital Markets Act, would push its effective commission down to as low as 5%.

Apple has faced mounting regulatory pressure over App Store fees worldwide in recent years. The company was fined €500 million ($572.2 million) last year for violating the EU's Digital Markets Act and has appealed the decision, while in the U.S. it has been ordered to allow external payment links following its legal fight with Epic Games. Apple said earlier this month that its App Store ecosystem generated more than $1.4 trillion in developer billings and sales in 2025, with China contributing the largest share at $562 billion.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Article Link: Apple Faces New App Store Complaint From Chinese Developers
 
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The Chinese market and the Chinese government are not going to tolerate it if Apple gives better terms to developers in other countries than to Chinese developers. China may not be pushing against Apple aggressively like the EU is but they aren't going to accept worse terms if Apple is giving better ones elsewhere. Apple will be forced to give in, and they won't be able to get away with playing games and throwing a tantrum either.
 
Yeah I know Americans are not used to have consumer rights like the rest of the world. Or workers rights. Or privacy rights. Or voting rights. Or any rights at all. 🙂
Yeah true, though the EU goes to far in to pushing stuff, where the US does nothing so something in between would be the best of all trades.
 
Sorry, Developers, but this issue never makes sense to me. The App Store is just that, a store. Developers are fortunate for the privilege to sell their work through Apple's store, thus giving the developers value for their efforts that they might not have otherwise. Like any other store selling any other product, it takes a very special product to dictate terms to the store, and few apps are that special. Finally, the notion that the store does not get to determine their mark up is crazy.
 
Yeah I know Americans are not used to have consumer rights like the rest of the world. Or workers rights. Or privacy rights. Or voting rights. Or any rights at all
Of course they do.
  • Rights to bear arms
  • Rights for employers to exploit their employees, bust unions and fire anyone anytime
  • Rights to legally screw over customers
  • Rights to set up surveillance infrastructure
Lots of rights. Just different priorities. Fundamentally a governmentsceptic, first-past-the-post and „winners take (and keep) it all“ society, with little regard for balancing the interests shareholders and other stakeholders.

Finally, the notion that the store does not get to determine their mark up is crazy.
When someone operates with monopoly power in providing important goods or services, civilised societies regulate it.
Nothing crazy about it at all.
 
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