While tech giants like Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta pour hundreds of billions into building massive AI infrastructure and frontier models, Apple appears to be quietly winning in a different way: by collecting hefty fees from the very rivals trying to dominate the space. According to recent analysis from AppMagic and reporting by The Wall Street Journal, generative AI apps paid Apple nearly $900 million in App Store fees in 2025 alone. Projections now indicate that figure will surpass $1 billion in 2026, driven primarily by in-app subscription commissions. Apple charges developers a standard 30% cut on subscription fees in the first year (dropping to 15% in subsequent years) when users sign up for premium AI services through apps on iOS, iPadOS, or macOS. The apps themselves — such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and xAI’s Grok — are typically free to download, but the revenue flows from users upgrading to paid tiers for advanced features, faster responses, or higher usage limits. OpenAI’s ChatGPT remains the dominant contributor, accounting for approximately 75% of the generative AI commission revenue on the App Store last year. xAI’s Grok trailed far behind at about 5%, with other tools like Anthropic’s Claude and Google’s Gemini making up the rest. Monthly subscription fees for these services often range from $20 upward, meaning Apple’s cut adds up quickly across millions of users. The revenue surge follows a sharp upward trajectory: App Store fees from generative AI apps rose from around $35 million in January 2025 to a peak of $101 million in August 2025, before moderating slightly due to fluctuating download trends. This passive income stream stands in stark contrast to the aggressive spending by Apple’s competitors. The so-called “hyperscalers” are collectively investing upwards of $700 billion this year in AI data centers, chips, and model training — expenses that have raised investor concerns about profitability in the short term. Meanwhile, Apple benefits from its massive installed base of over 2.5 billion active devices, which serve as the primary gateway for many consumers to access these third-party AI tools. Even as Apple Intelligence continues to roll out and mature, the ecosystem still funnels significant traffic and subscriptions to external providers. Critics have long pointed to Apple’s perceived lag in generative AI development, particularly with Siri remaining less capable than modern chatbots in certain tasks. However, the App Store model turns that perceived weakness into a financial strength: Apple doesn’t need to build the best AI model to profit from the category, it simply needs to control the platform where users discover and pay for them. As discussions around AI monetization heat up, this dynamic underscores Apple’s enduring advantage as a “landlord” in the mobile ecosystem. While rivals burn cash to build the technology, Apple collects rent on the distribution.For now, the strategy appears to be paying off handsomely, providing a buffer for investors amid broader competitive pressures in hardware and services. Apple’s stock has held steady in recent trading, reflecting confidence in the resilience of its high-margin App Store business, even in the fast-evolving world of artificial intelligence. A little birdie sings us very positive songs regarding Apple’s all-new next-gen Siri. – MacDailyNews, September 26, 2025 Support MacDailyNews at no extra cost to you by using this link to shop at Amazon. The post Apple set to pocket $1 billion+ from rival AI apps in 2026 despite Siri issues appeared first on MacDailyNews. You're currently a free subscriber to MacDailyNews. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Apple set to pocket $1 billion+ from rival AI apps in 2026 despite Siri issues
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Apple set to pocket $1 billion+ from rival AI apps in 2026 despite Siri issues
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