Apple has introduced a new Mini Apps Partner Programme that halves App Store commissions for qualifying mini apps to 15 percent, marking a significant shift in how Apple wants developers to build and monetise app-within-app experiences.
A New Approach To App Store Revenue
Apple has announced that developers who host mini apps inside a larger iOS or iPadOS app can now qualify for a reduced 15 percent commission on digital purchases made within those mini apps. Mini apps are small, self-contained experiences built using web technologies such as HTML5 and JavaScript. They run inside a host app rather than being downloaded as separate apps from the App Store.
Apple has supported this format since 2017 under its App Review Guideline 4.7, which covers mini apps, mini games, streaming games, chatbots, plug-ins and emulators. This new programme is the first time Apple has offered a financial incentive that directly targets this part of its ecosystem.
The standard App Store commission can be as high as 30 percent for many in-app purchases, so the new 15 percent rate represents a meaningful reduction for developers who operate or contribute to mini app ecosystems. Apple says the aim is to help developers “grow their business” while ensuring that mini apps continue to meet App Store safety, age-rating and payments standards.
What Mini Apps Are And Why They Matter
Mini apps allow users to access small, task-based experiences without installing a separate full app. For example, a user might open a messaging app and launch a mini game, shopping experience, restaurant booking or banking tool directly within it.
The concept has existed for years in China, where WeChat mini programmes have become a major part of digital life. They let users book taxis, play games, access government services or shop online, all from within a single app. Tencent’s ecosystem has grown to such an extent that analysts estimate it has well over a billion active users.
Similar ideas have now appeared in other services. For example, LINE (a Japanese messaging and social app), Alipay (a major Chinese digital payments platform), Telegram (the global messaging app) and Discord (a communication platform popular with gaming and online communities) all offer mini app-style features. ChatGPT also appears to be moving into the space by allowing users to open external services from inside its chatbot, including travel, retail, music and design tools. This trend creates a growing shift in how people discover and interact with digital services.
Apple’s move, therefore, could be seen as a clear signal that Apple intends to support similar patterns on iOS, rather than allowing super apps, AI platforms or rival ecosystems to define this behaviour without Apple’s involvement.
Why Now?
The timing appears tied to several overlapping pressures. For example, regulatory scrutiny has intensified in the United States, Europe and the United Kingdom over Apple’s control of in-app payments and its App Store commissions. Authorities have questioned whether Apple’s rules limit competition. Apple has already faced investigations around super apps, with US regulators arguing that Apple’s policies restricted the growth of app-within-app ecosystems.
There is also a commercial backdrop. Reports have suggested that Apple and Tencent previously agreed a 15 percent commission for purchases made through WeChat’s mini apps. Given the scale of WeChat’s reach, even a small slice of that activity could be extremely valuable to Apple over time.
Apple is also most likely responding to the rise of AI platforms that attempt to reduce reliance on traditional apps. Some developers have speculated that if users spend more time in AI chatbots and transact through them, the App Store’s central role could weaken. Mini apps give Apple a way to reassert influence over this changing landscape.
How The Programme Works
To join the Mini Apps Partner Programme, a developer must operate a host app available on the App Store for iOS or iPadOS. The host app must comply with all Apple Developer Programme conditions and App Review Guideline 4.7, including the requirement to provide a detailed manifest listing every mini app and its metadata.
Participating apps must support specific Apple technologies. These include the Advanced Commerce API, which manages in-app purchase flows for mini apps, and the Declared Age Range API, which helps developers present age-appropriate content. Apple says this provides a safer and more consistent experience for customers.
Developers must also use Apple’s in-app purchase system. Purchases inside mini apps can include consumables, non-consumables, auto-renewing subscriptions and non-renewing subscriptions. If these purchases meet Apple’s criteria and are handled through the Advanced Commerce API, the 15 percent commission applies.
This means that while developers receive a lower fee, they must integrate more of Apple’s commerce and safety tools to qualify. Apple has made clear that the reduced rate is conditional on this deeper technical alignment.
What It Means For Developers
For developers who run mini app ecosystems, such as messaging platforms, digital wallets or gaming communities, the financial impact is pretty straightforward, i.e., a lower fee means more revenue stays within the ecosystem. A host app might use that extra revenue to invest in more mini apps, or to share income with third-party creators more generously.
The programme may also make it more attractive for smaller studios or service providers to build mini apps instead of full native apps. A mini app can be faster to develop and easier to distribute because users do not need to search for or install anything. Host apps with large user bases could become important distribution channels for businesses of all sizes.
At the same time, some developers have voiced concerns about the additional work required to meet Apple’s technical requirements. The Advanced Commerce API and the detailed manifest process introduce extra steps that may be burdensome for small teams.
Competitors And The Wider App Market
Apple’s move directly intersects with the strategies of companies that operate super app-like platforms. WeChat’s mini app ecosystem is the clearest example, but others are emerging. Google already supports Android instant apps, and messaging services worldwide are experimenting with their own in-app experience formats.
The rise of mini apps could gradually change consumer behaviour. For example, if users spend more time inside host apps that contain multiple mini apps, they may download fewer standalone apps from the App Store. This could be an opportunity and a risk for Apple, since it could reduce direct App Store engagement while opening new revenue paths within host environments.
AI platforms also play a role here. For example, mini apps inside AI tools introduce a new layer of app discovery and interaction. Apple’s decision to strengthen the economic and technical framework for mini apps may help keep developers focused on the App Store ecosystem rather than diverting too much attention to alternative platforms.
What Users And Businesses Will Notice
For everyday users, the change will mostly be felt inside the apps they already use. Mini apps can launch quickly, offer simple interfaces and provide focused features without requiring a full install.
For businesses, this change could widen opportunities to appear inside high-traffic apps without committing to a full native app build. For example, retailers, travel companies, financial services, entertainment platforms and many other sectors could use mini apps to reach customers more efficiently. The standardised payment and refund process through Apple may also reassure customers, particularly those making purchases in unfamiliar mini apps.
Challenges And Criticisms
However, some early reactions from developers suggest that Apple’s programme may reinforce, rather than relax, Apple’s control. For example, developers must adopt Apple’s payment tools and age-rating systems to qualify for the lower commission, which critics argue keeps Apple firmly in charge of the revenue chain.
There are also ongoing concerns about App Store competition. Although the fee is lower, developers still cannot use their own payment rails. Privacy groups have questioned whether Apple’s age-rating system will satisfy regulators who are proposing stricter verification measures.
Discoverability remains another challenge for mini apps in general. For example, in large host apps, mini apps risk becoming difficult to find unless the platform provides strong search tools or clear navigation. Apple’s metadata requirements aim to improve transparency and quality, but they also increase the workload for developers who manage large mini app catalogues.
Investors Positive
That said, investors appear to view the programme positively, describing it as a strategic move that supports revenue growth while strengthening Apple’s position as app behaviour evolves. The response from developers and users over the coming months will reveal whether the balance of incentives works in practice.
What This Means For Your Business?
Apple’s decision could reshape how developers think about distributing lightweight digital experiences, since the economic incentive is far stronger than anything Apple has offered around mini apps before. The requirement to adopt Apple’s own commerce and safety tools keeps the company firmly at the centre of the transaction chain, yet the reduced commission makes the trade-off more appealing than previous arrangements. This balance will matter as host apps weigh up whether the increased technical work is justified by the additional revenue and the chance to attract more third-party creators.
The wider market impact could be significant because mini app ecosystems have already changed digital behaviour in other regions. Apple’s move suggests that similar patterns may now emerge more visibly on iOS. If host apps that already attract large audiences begin to expand their mini app offerings, a growing share of daily digital activity could take place inside these environments instead of through standalone native apps. This may alter how services are discovered, how often users browse the App Store and how developers plan their product strategies.
UK businesses may find that mini apps offer an important new route to reach customers who prefer quicker, simpler interactions. A retailer, service provider or travel firm could appear inside a widely used host app rather than relying entirely on its own native app to attract attention. This could mean lower development costs, a broader reach and could give businesses access to an environment where purchases, refunds and subscriptions are handled through familiar Apple systems that many customers already trust.
Others will also be watching the adoption rate closely. For example, regulators may take interest in how Apple links the lower commission to its own technologies, especially in markets where competition and platform control are under scrutiny. Developers will want to see whether Apple’s technical requirements remain manageable as the number of mini apps grows. Host platforms will need to balance the commercial opportunity with the operational responsibility of policing large catalogues of third-party content.
It is likely that the coming months will show whether developers embrace the model at scale or continue to rely on native apps and alternative platforms. Apple has put forward a clearer financial incentive at a moment when the structure of the app ecosystem is evolving, and both the market response and the regulatory environment will shape what happens next.



