Apple says it will remove outdated or low-effort apps in revised App Store guidelines

Apple says it will remove outdated or low-effort apps in revised App Store guidelines

Apple has revised its App Store review guidelines, now allowing the removal of apps in certain well-established categories if they are not updated, improved, or attracting a user base. Previously, Apple’s policies focused on rejecting new copycat or redundant apps in already saturated categories, but the latest changes extend enforcement to existing apps that remain stagnant.

Under the new terms, developers are prohibited from submitting apps that are indistinguishable from those widely available. This effort targets repetitive variants and aims to preserve App Store quality while helping unique or better-maintained apps stand out.

Building on these changes, Apple specifically names dating, flashlight, sound effects, wallpaper, simple timers, and fortune-telling apps as examples requiring meaningful differentiation or improvement before new versions are accepted. Apps in these categories now face removal if they fail to evolve or engage users.

Following this, the guidelines emphasize that low-quality or low-effort apps, such as drinking games, Kama Sutra, fart, and burp apps, may be removed outright, with repeat offenders risking expulsion from the Apple Developer Program. These policy changes reflect Apple’s broader focus on app discovery and aim to reduce clutter, allowing more visibility for diligent developers and higher-quality apps.

by Paul

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Apple App Store offers a vast marketplace featuring 1.8 million apps, providing secure payment options and curated expert picks. Known for its high privacy standards and content moderation, it operates across 175 regions and supports 40 languages. Rated 3.6, it includes features like ad-free browsing, dark mode, and file hosting.

Comments

shytune8036
1

Highly necessary change. So many trash vibe coded apps that all look the same and do the same thing. Then get no traction and never updated bc the dev finally realized we don’t want it!

UserPower
-1

Apple has realized that new submitted apps has greatly risen for a year (+80%) when user reviews has declined by 20%, meaning people are less and less downloading new apps, partially because of AI but also because Apple is adding every single popular idea directly to iOS.

And since Apple is making some $30B every year on App Store sales and subscriptions, it would be very easy for Apple to compare the content of apps with trends to define how great success an app could have.

But devs were attracted to App Store because every app could become viral (it's why many accepted to pay $100 over the years) but if a simple flashlight app needs now five talented devs and two great designers, it may only attract same old big companies that make boring apps.

Gu