Google Lowers Play Store Subscription Fee From 30% to 15% - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Google Lowers Play Store Subscription Fee From 30% to 15%

After lowering its Play Store commission from 30 percent to 15 percent in March, Google today announced that it is making the same change to subscription fees, an update applicable to all app developers, reports The Verge.

play store google
At the current time, Google's subscription policy works like Apple's. Google collects 30 percent from a subscription during the first year, and then drops that to 15 percent for each subsequent year if customers keep a continuous subscription going.

Google recognizes that many businesses are unable to benefit from the fee cut because of the continuous rule that it has, so Google is dropping all subscription fees to 15 percent "from day one," effectively removing prior year-long subscription requirement. The fee cut was also previously limited to the first $1 million in revenue.

Apple also offers reduced 15 percent subscription fees from day one, but that's limited to developers who are part of its App Store Small Business Program, which is available to those who earn up to but don’t exceed to $1 million in a calendar year. For other developers that are not part of that program, Apple takes a 30 percent cut until a subscriber has been subscribed to a service for 12 months.

All apps in the Google Play Store will pay 15 percent instead of 30 percent for all subscriptions, but Google also plans to lower the fee even further for some ebooks and on-demand streaming music service apps. Fees could be as low as 10 percent for apps that fall into these categories.

Google is making the change to subscription fees as it faces increased regulatory pressure much like Apple. It too is in the same legal battle over in-app purchases as Apple with Epic Games, and it is under the same scrutiny in the United States and other countries.

Popular Stories

Apple Silicon AI Optimized Feature Siri

Apple's Overhauled Siri Will Reportedly Run on Nvidia's Blackwell Chips

Thursday June 4, 2026 2:38 am PDT by
Apple will rely on Google's fleet of Nvidia chips to power its overhauled version of Siri when it launches in September, according to a new report from The Information. Last week, the outlet reported that Apple plans to highlight the on-device AI capabilities of its devices at WWDC next week, but queries that require cloud-based processing will still fall back on one of Google's large Gemini ...
Apple Intelligence General Feature 2

Google Gemini Could Be the Ceiling on Apple's AI Ambitions

Monday June 8, 2026 5:31 am PDT by
Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says the real test of today's WWDC keynote is whether Apple can deliver better AI experiences than Google using the same Gemini models. Apple is using Google's Gemini to underpin the revamped version of Siri and new Apple Intelligence features. The key takeaway from WWDC, Kuo argues in a new post on X, will not be the short-term market reaction after the event. It...
apple intelligence architecture

Apple Reveals New AI Architecture Built Around Google Gemini Models

Monday June 8, 2026 10:38 am PDT by
Apple today announced a major overhaul of its Apple Intelligence platform, revealing a new architecture built on foundation models developed in collaboration with Google using the technologies behind the Gemini family. The new architecture centers on Apple Foundation Models co-developed with Google, which Apple says are adapted to run both on-device and on servers through its existing...

Top Rated Comments

mi7chy Avatar
61 months ago

Wait, so it wasn’t only Apple that had the outrageous 30% fee?? Did the courts know this?? How come Apple didn’t point this out?? /s
Android sideloading like MacOS, Windows, Linux, etc. circumvents the Google Play Store and fees. Apple Play Store is a forced tax. Imagine if state/federal forces you to buy electronics at msrp with tax from brick and mortar and you couldn't buy for less than msrp without tax from private party.
Score: 17 Votes (Like | Disagree)
blazerunner Avatar
61 months ago
Your turn, Apple.
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)
61 months ago
Nice job Google. Don’t use your services too much but for people that do this is a win
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
WiseAJ Avatar
61 months ago
Now watch as prices still remain exactly the same for all of the subscriptions, no benefit at all to customers.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
TheYayAreaLiving 🎗️ Avatar
61 months ago
Wow! Change is happening. Next up
Is Apple. Please lower the subscription fee. Apple you make a lot of money via services alone.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
61 months ago
Regardless of how one looks at it, it is pretty comical that Epic's lawsuit helps to push these changes, however, Epic's Fortnite will not return to any of the stores profiting from this until the litigation is resolved.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)