Apple banned from monetizing and restricting external payment links in apps in the US
A US district judge, Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled today that, starting immediately, Apple is no longer allowed to tax external payment links within App Store titles nor can it restrict how they appear within the apps.
This ruling came out of the longstanding Apple vs. Epic Games legal dispute, which has been going on for over four years now. While an earlier ruling was in Apple's favor, the latest one is a victory not just for Epic but all developers looking to distribute their apps within the US iOS App Store and do not want to pay Apple for using its payment systems.

As part of this latest ruling, Apple can no longer impose any commission or any fee on purchases that consumers make outside an app. It also cannot restrict developers' style, formatting, or placement of links for purchases outside of an app nor can it block or limit the use of buttons or other calls to action. Apple also cannot interfere with consumers' choice to leave an app with anything beyond a neutral message apprising users that they are going to a third-party site.
It did not help Apple's case that the company's VP of Finance, Alex Roman, was found lying under oath, and that company CEO Tim Cook knowingly advocated defying the court's original 2021 ruling despite Apple Fellow Phil Schiller suggesting otherwise.
Apple has responded to this ruling stating that “We strongly disagree with the decision. We will comply with the court’s order and we will appeal.”
Originally, Apple required developers distributing their apps through its App Store to force all users to use Apple's own payment system for any purchases made within the app. As with the purchase of the app itself, any in-app purchases were also taxed 30% of the total purchase amount, which Apple pocketed. Developers were prevented from having links to external purchase pages within their apps or even hint at such pages existing, and when a later ruling prevented the company from doing that it resorted to scare tactics every time a user tried to click on an external payment link. And even the external payment was subjected to a 27% tax.
Epic — and also Spotify, which has had its own run-ins with Apple on similar matters — have issued statements that they are pleased with this decision and will be updating their apps immediately.
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Reader comments
- Bot10Exists
- 05 May 2025
- N51
at what point did I sincerely defend apple? I clearly implied that people who buy iPhones are either tech-illiterate, are over-reliant on an ecosystem that isn't all it's made up to be, or are stupid.
- Vegetaholic
- 04 May 2025
- n5R
People who buy their phones, know nothing about phones or how anything works anyway. They just pretend this is the only brand that exist in the world. Mostly they have no clue what payment options exist or not. That's what you call ignorance or ...
- Vegetaholic
- 04 May 2025
- n5R
Apple tree is falling to pieces, got chopped quite badly 🤣 Kudos for court ruling. Life will be much better for many developers and users now.