Google Allegedly Pays Apple Portion of Chrome Search Revenue as Part of Secretive Non-Compete Deal - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Google Allegedly Pays Apple Portion of Chrome Search Revenue as Part of Secretive Non-Compete Deal

Google allegedly pays Apple a portion of all search revenue from Chrome for iOS in what appears to be a non-compete deal, The Register reports.

applegoogle
According to a source said to be familiar with the matter who spoke to The Register, Google has been paying Apple a portion of search revenue generated by Chrome users on iOS in return for being the default search provider in Safari and other commercial benefits. The relationship between Apple and Google is an ongoing area of scrutiny for the U.S. Justice Department and the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), which are apparently looking into the secretive search revenue sharing deal.

Google pays Apple around $15 billion annually to ensure that its search engine is the default option on Apple devices, but the latest news that Google is purportedly paying Apple for searches in Chrome for iOS as part of a search revenue sharing deal is a new development. The revenue sharing agreement is said to be known about in detail by only a small number of people. The amount Google is paying Apple and the wider terms of the deal have been redacted from CMA reports.

Apple does not provide any obvious value to users seeking to use Google Search within Google Chrome for iOS. As a result, the CMA is concerned that the payments are designed to discourage Apple from competing with Google with its own search engine, which would have major ramifications for Google's business model.

The arrangement was first alluded to publicly in an antitrust lawsuit filed on December 27, 2021 in San Francisco. In an amended PDF from March 2022 related to the lawsuit, the complaint alleges that Apple has been paid for the profits it would have made if it had competed with Google, minus the challenges and costs of actually doing so:


20. Because more than half of Google's search business was conducted through Apple devices, Apple was a major potential threat to Google, and that threat was designated by Google as "Code Red."
21. Google paid billions of dollars to Apple and agreed to share its profits with Apple to eliminate the threat and fear of Apple as a competitor.
22. Google viewed the aspect of Apple as a potential competitor to be "Code Red."
23. If Apple became a competitor in the search business, Google would have lost half of its business.

Apple and Google are seeking a dismissal for the case on account of lack of evidence of a horizontal agreement between the two companies, but the CMA's investigation now seems to suggest that such an agreement does exist.

This may explain why Apple has been reluctant to launch a rival search engine or develop Safari to the point of becoming a credible challenger to Chrome on macOS, according to The Register. Likewise, Google would be disincentivized from pushing Apple to allow a non-WebKit version of Chrome for iOS.

The result is a situation where Apple and Google see substantial benefits in maintaining each others' dominance. This division of the market is said to be "per se illegal" under U.S. antitrust laws and is likely to come under fire as more information emerges.

Popular Stories

Gemini Siri Feature

Google Confirms Gemini-Powered Siri Coming Later This Year

Wednesday April 22, 2026 11:08 am PDT by
Google today commented on its partnership with Apple, confirming that Gemini will power a new, more personalized version of Siri that's set to be released later in 2026. Google Cloud chief Thomas Kurian mentioned the Apple partnership during Google Cloud Next 2026, a conference that's taking place in Las Vegas, Nevada today. Earlier this year, we announced a monumental partnership with one...
google photos wardrobe

Google Photos to Get AI 'Wardrobe' Feature

Wednesday April 29, 2026 3:50 pm PDT by
Google Photos is getting a new wardrobe planning feature that will help you decide what to wear. AI will pull in images of clothing from the Google Photos library, organizing clothing items into a digital closet. You will be able to put items together to create outfits, and even virtually try them with a digital avatar on to see how they'll look. The Google Photos app will show all items of...
Photos App Icon Liquid Glass

Google Says Pixel Phones Won't Get Apple's Liquid Glass Design

Wednesday May 6, 2026 1:57 pm PDT by
The Android operating system for Pixel smartphones is not going to take design cues from Apple and adopt a Liquid Glass aesthetic, Google Android president Sameer Samat said recently (via 9to5Google). In response to a social media mockup of an Android device with a Liquid Glass design, Samat said, "Not happening! Y'all are wild." The mockup was in response to a teaser video for The Android...

Top Rated Comments

42 months ago
Meanwhile Apple be acting like they care about your privacy while they take a payout from one of the most notorious privacy-invading companies 💅
Score: 42 Votes (Like | Disagree)
42 months ago
Changing from Google to DuckDuckGo is one of the first things I do with any new device.
Score: 33 Votes (Like | Disagree)
madmin Avatar
42 months ago
if all long term Apple or Google users are paid a million each in compensation we can call it evens
Score: 23 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sniffies Avatar
42 months ago

This may explain why Apple has been reluctant to launch a rival search engine or develop Safari to the point of becoming a credible challenger to Chrome on macOS
Are you telling me Safari could've been even snappier??
Score: 20 Votes (Like | Disagree)
supremedesigner Avatar
42 months ago
I have been using duckduckgo for my personal devices and bing for my work computer.

I only will use Google for stackoverflow and css/html news.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
42 months ago

Meanwhile Apple be acting like they care about your privacy while they take a payout from one of the most notorious privacy-invading companies 💅
So what? Apple can't babysit every idiot that doesn't do the bare minimum to protect their privacy.

Let Google give them billions and people that care about privacy will change the default.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)