Moneycontrol

Apple updates App Store pricing and developer payouts in nine markets after tax changes

Apple has announced changes to App Store pricing and developer proceeds across nine countries, citing updated tax regulations and exchange rate adjustments. The revisions take effect immediately, with additional pricing changes scheduled for Mauritius later in February.

January 31, 2026 / 15:58 IST
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Snapshot AI
  • Apple updates App Store prices in 9 countries due to new tax rules
  • VAT hikes in Russia, Kazakhstan, Zimbabwe; new taxes in other regions
  • Automated pricing sees adjustments; manual pricing may need review

Apple has begun rolling out changes to App Store pricing and developer payouts in response to new and revised tax rules across multiple countries. The update, which takes effect today, affects automated pricing for apps and In-App Purchases in nine markets, with further adjustments planned next month for one specific region.

In an email sent to developers, Apple said that proceeds from App Store sales are being recalculated to reflect changes in local tax policies. According to the company, these updates rely on publicly available exchange rate data from financial information providers, with the goal of keeping app and In-App Purchase prices broadly consistent across global storefronts despite regional tax differences.

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The changes impact countries where governments have either introduced new taxes, adjusted existing rates, or removed temporary levies. Bhutan is seeing the introduction of a 5 percent Goods and Services Tax, while Mauritius has introduced a 15 percent value-added tax. In Kazakhstan and Russia, VAT rates have increased to 16 percent and 22 percent respectively. Zimbabwe has implemented a smaller VAT rise, moving from 15 percent to 15.5 percent.

Some regions, however, are seeing tax relief rather than increases. Finland and Lithuania have both reduced VAT rates for specific categories such as news, magazines, books, and audiobooks. In Finland, the reduced VAT rate has dropped from 14 percent to 13.5 percent, while Lithuania has cut its equivalent rate from 9 percent to 5 percent. Türkiye has lowered its digital services tax from 7.5 percent to 5 percent, and Ghana has removed the COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy that was introduced in 2019.