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App StoreAppleAppsiOSiPhone

Apple cuts App Store fees to 15% for mini app developers

With a new partner program cutting fees in half, Apple aims to boost mini app ecosystems while easing long-running concerns about App Store restrictions.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Nov 13, 2025, 3:00 PM EST
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The iconic rainbow Apple logo on a black background. The apple is outlined in white and filled with a rainbow pattern, with a green leaf on top.
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On Nov. 13, 2025, Apple quietly opened a new door: a Mini Apps Partner Program that offers developers who build small, web-based apps inside bigger host apps a dramatically lower cut on in-mini-app purchases — 15 percent, rather than the headline 30 percent Apple has long taken from in-app transactions. It’s small in name, but hardly trivial in consequence.

This is the company trying to square three tricky circles at once: keep control of how money moves on iPhones, give host platforms and independent teams room to build “mini” experiences, and blunt legal and regulatory pressure that accuses Apple of using App Store rules to limit competition. The move also comes on the heels of a separate deal with Tencent that lets Apple take the same 15 percent cut on purchases inside WeChat’s mini apps — a high-profile pilot that made the new program feel less experimental and more inevitable.

What Apple means by “mini apps”

Mini apps are what they sound like: self-contained experiences built with web technologies (HTML5 and JavaScript) that live inside a host app. Think a taxi booking interface inside a chat app, a micro-game inside a social network, or a food-ordering widget embedded in a messaging client. The format took off in China — WeChat and Alipay made entire ecosystems out of these tiny apps — and over the past few years, the concept has spread to Western apps from Telegram to Snapchat and OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Apple has supported mini apps on the App Store since 2017; what’s new is the economics and the guardrails.

The deal

If you host qualifying mini apps and you adopt Apple’s required technologies, qualifying in-mini-app purchases will be billed to Apple at 15 percent. To get the cut, host apps must support a set of Apple APIs — notably the Declared Age Range API and the Advanced Commerce API — and be approved for the Mini Apps Partner Program. Apple’s developer page walks through eligibility and the manifest-style metadata that host apps must supply. In short, Apple will cut you a break on the commission if you let it handle certain safety, age-declaration and commerce plumbing.

There’s a subtle but important point: Apple collects that 15 percent directly from purchases, but how the host app and the mini app split their own cut is left to their private deal. That preserves host apps’ freedom to negotiate, while ensuring Apple doesn’t get bypassed on the payment rails.

Why now? Law, leverage and a big China test case

This isn’t just about developers and nicer math. For years, regulators and rival companies have accused Apple of erecting rules that make it hard for “super apps” — platforms that bundle many services into one experience — to flourish on iPhones. The U.S. Department of Justice’s blockbuster antitrust lawsuit leveled charges that Apple’s App Store rules suppress super apps and other multi-service offerings that might weaken Apple’s dominance. Offering a lower cut for mini-app transactions is a smart way to show regulators that Apple can be flexible without surrendering control.

At the same time, the Tencent-Apple arrangement — which lets Apple take 15 percent on purchases inside WeChat mini apps — was a major practical milestone. It closed a loophole where some in-app commerce in host platforms had previously sidestepped Apple’s payments. With the WeChat deal in place, Apple now has a model it can extend beyond China while pointing to concrete agreements when regulators ask for proof of progress.

The trade-offs for developers and hosts

Lower fees are attractive, obviously. A 15 percent commission can materially change economics for microtransactions common in games, utilities, and in-app services. But the discount isn’t unconditional. Hosts must implement Apple’s APIs and submit to Apple’s review and commerce flows. For some developers, that’s a welcome simplification; for others, it’s a new dependency.

There are also practical wrinkles. Host apps still negotiate their own revenue split with mini-app publishers, and Apple requires use of its Advanced Commerce API rather than App Store Connect for these transactions — so there’s engineering work and compliance to factor in. Smaller teams will need to weigh whether the integration effort and Apple’s reporting requirements are worth the lower percentage.

What this could mean for users

If the economics shift in developers’ favor, users could see more mini apps and, potentially, cheaper in-mini-app features. Alternatively, hosts might keep the savings to invest in product or pocket it for their cut — revenue decisions will vary. Apple also frames the requirement to use age-declaration tools as a safety feature, saying it will help protect younger users — a public-interest argument that also strengthens Apple’s legal posture on youth-safety issues.

The bigger picture

Apple’s Mini Apps Partner Program is part product play, part policy move. It softens a long-standing complaint against Apple — the so-called “Apple tax” — without abandoning the company’s core control over payments and distribution. For regulators, it’s an olive branch; for big host platforms, it’s a template for working with Apple; for smaller developers, it’s an invitation with strings attached.

Expect the story to split into two threads from here: adoption and arbitration. Will major Western hosts adopt Apple’s APIs and push mini-app ecosystems forward, or will only a handful of players (and big Chinese partners) take Apple up on the offer? And if disputes about revenue sharing or technical requirements arise, will they end up being another front in the App Store legal battles? Those are the tectonic shifts to watch.

Apple didn’t abolish its commission — it created a pathway to a lower one, in exchange for tighter technical controls and safety tools. For some developers and host platforms, that trade will make perfect sense; for others, it will look like the same old deal with a smaller number attached. Either way, the mini apps moment just moved from the fringes to the mainstream — and Apple is clearly trying to shape what that mainstream looks like.


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