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Russian bill would force Apple, Google to take smaller cuts of app sales

July 31, 2025

If Apple and Google weren’t already feelingpressure to reform their app stores, they might feel it through a proposed piece of Russian legislation.

Reutersreports that politician Fedot Tumusov has submitted a bill to Russia’s lower house of parliament that would cap the commission on app sales to 20%, or a third lower than the 30% Apple and Google respectively demand from the App Store and Play Store. It would also require that a third of the commission go toward an IT specialist training fund.

Google Play Store on smartphone stock photo 1

The move would be a “growth opportunity” for developers, Tumusov said.

We’ve asked Apple and Google for comment.

There’s no guarantee the bill will pass. If it did, however, it could force Apple and Google to make difficult decisions. They would have to either reduce their take from app sales (even if it’s just a Russian exception) or else stop offering app downloads in the country. Russia is one of the world’s largest smartphone markets, and losing that could affect the bottom line for both tech giants.

This wouldn’t be the first time either company has been asked to change its ways in the region. Russian antitrust regulatorsmade Google unbundle appson Android devices, and determined thatApple abused App Store dominancein rejecting a Kaspersky parental control app. Officials aren’t particularly fond of the effects Apple and Google have on Russian developers, and that’s creating serious headaches for both firms.

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