Apple quietly dropped a pretty significant fee cut for developers in China — and the timing is no accident.
Starting March 15, 2026, Apple is slashing its App Store commission rates for the China mainland storefront. The standard cut on in-app purchases and paid app downloads will fall from 30% to 25%, and smaller developers under Apple’s Small Business Program and Mini Apps Partner Program will see their rates drop from 15% to 12%. Auto-renewals of in-app subscriptions after the first year also get the 12% treatment, down from 15%.
Apple’s announcement was politely worded — the company said the changes come “following discussions with the Chinese regulator” — but there’s a pretty clear story behind that diplomatic language. China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) had been laying the groundwork for a formal antitrust probe into Apple’s App Store policies since at least early 2025, with regulators reportedly frustrated by the 30% “Apple tax” and restrictions on third-party payment options. Essentially, Apple blinked before things escalated into an official investigation.
The financial stakes are real. According to estimates cited by China’s People’s Daily, the fee cuts will save the country’s approximately 5 million developers over 6 billion yuan — roughly $870 million — every single year. That’s a huge chunk of revenue Apple is voluntarily leaving on the table, a clear sign of just how seriously it’s taking the regulatory heat.
This move isn’t happening in a vacuum, either. Apple has been fighting antitrust battles on multiple fronts globally, having already faced lawsuits, investigations, or legislative restrictions in at least 10 countries and regions over its App Store practices. And in China specifically, the pressure has been compounded by rising competition from domestic app ecosystems — companies like Xiaomi are building out their own rival platforms, giving Chinese developers more options to route around Apple entirely.
Apple insists this is about fairness, not fear. The company says it’s “committed to terms that remain fair and transparent” and promises that commission rates in China will never be higher than in other markets. Whether you take that at face value or read it as strategic positioning, the result for developers is the same — a lighter fee bill starting this weekend.
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