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Apple's Services Revenue Expected to Top $100 Billion for First Time

Apple's services business is expected to hit $100 billion in annual revenue for the first time this year, reports the Financial Times.

Apple Services 2022
Apple's services unit is expected to deliver annual revenues of $108.6 billion in the year to last month, which is up around 13 percent from the previous year. That's according to analysts' estimates at Visible Alpha.

If the estimates prove accurate when Apple reports its Q4 fiscal results this week, Apple's services division will be larger than the entire annual sales of Disney or Tesla this year. According to JPMorgan, services could make up a quarter of Apple's revenue but as much as 50 percent of its profit.

Apple's services business includes revenue generated from the App Store, iCloud, Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Arcade, AppleCare, and Apple Pay. It also benefits from Apple's multibillion-dollar deal with Google to make it the default search engine on Apple devices.

The report notes that the mammoth revenues of Apple's high-margin division come despite mounting legal and regulatory pressure on its App Store, both from a looming U.S. anti-competition case from the Justice Department and new regulations in Europe that could curtail its App Store fees of up to 30 percent on digital goods purchases.

Despite ongoing legal challenges, analysts expect services to account for a growing share of Apple's business in the coming years, driven in part by the company's media expansion into live sports – including its recent $700 million deal to stream Formula 1 races in the U.S.

According to Visible Alpha estimates, services could account for over 30 percent of Apple's total revenue by the end of the decade, with sales potentially reaching $175 billion. By comparison, the iPhone is projected to account for roughly half of Apple's estimated $415 billion in total revenue for fiscal 2025, with smartphone sales expected to grow about 4 percent.

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Top Rated Comments

7 months ago
Just wait until they put Ads on Apple Maps 😒
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
All that money from the 30% fees is basically money they got by blackmailing their customers: "Pay us that fee or you can't install that app on your phone!". I can't understand that some people still defend that.

Imagine a car manufacturer demanded 30% of the revenue, if that car is used as a taxi.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 months ago
I still don't understand why they don't do an Apple TV(+) / Apple Originals type of push for gaming, producing and financing AAA releases on day one across platforms, from Apple TV to Mac.

I don't think they're short on cash and nowadays Apple makes the most capable gaming hardware in terms of GPU perf in most form factors (handhelds, tablets, portable laptops, sff desktops and even set top boxes).

The M5 chip is beating dedicated more expensive gaming laptops like the Razer Blade 14, while costing less on emulated Windows games, let alone native ports.

Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
carlsson Avatar
7 months ago

All that money from the 30% fees is basically money they got by blackmailing their customers: "Pay us that fee or you can't install that app on your phone!". I can't understand that some people still defend that.

Imagine a car manufacturer demanded 30% of the revenue, if that car is used as a taxi.
Imagine a store that sells things for more than it buys them! 😱
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
iDento Avatar
7 months ago

I still don't understand why they don't do an Apple TV(+) / Apple Originals type of push for gaming, producing and financing AAA releases on day one across platforms, from Apple TV to Mac.

I don't think they're short on cash and nowadays Apple makes the most capable gaming hardware in terms of GPU perf in most form factors (handhelds, tablets, portable laptops, sff desktops and even set top boxes).

The M5 chip is beating dedicated more expensive gaming laptops like the Razor Blade 14, while costing less on emulated Windows games, let alone native ports.

The video games industry doesn’t work this way. Even Microsoft is losing to Japanese companies simply because they know how to make games, which isn’t simple at all, and money can’t fix it.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
davidec Avatar
7 months ago
Apple is a decent company that’s come out with a relatively clean sheet after all these years. I don’t mind spending more on their services than I do on groceries!
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)