Japan Paves Way for Third-Party iPhone App Stores, Pressures Apple's Closed Ecosystem

November 6, 2025
Japan Paves Way for Third-Party iPhone App Stores, Pressures Apple's Closed Ecosystem
  • Japan is moving toward allowing third-party iPhone app stores after a ruling from its Fair Trade Commission, with iOS 26.2 beta screenshots suggesting support for alternative stores in the country.

  • Apple is still slated to release iOS 26.2 in December 2025, with a public window typically between December 9 and December 16.

  • Industry observers view Japan’s move as potentially a model for broader reforms that could fragment the app economy and reshape how apps are distributed and monetized.

  • The iOS 26.2 beta appears to enable installing and using alternative stores such as AltStore PAL and Epic Games, though Fortnite in-app purchases remain region-blocked for now.

  • Regulators worldwide have pressed Apple to permit third-party app stores, with the EU Digital Markets Act mandating them in 27 member states and similar push elsewhere including Brazil and Australia.

  • If regulatory momentum continues, a broader shift away from a fully closed iPhone experience could unfold, with future rollouts potentially targeting other regions.

  • Apple has historically opposed these rulings and has called for DMA repeal or reform, even as regulators push for broader access to app stores.

  • Analysts suggest Apple would benefit from embracing the evolving regulatory landscape rather than resisting, amid ongoing legal pressures and potential more store openings.

  • Regulatory and antitrust scrutiny worldwide is accelerating efforts to loosen Apple’s control over app distribution and in-app commissions.

  • Japan’s approach appears to be a staged rollout designed to refine processes before wider adoption, aiming to align with law while addressing security concerns.

  • The beta’s approval of alternative storefronts points to a December 2025 public release and could include stores like AltStore or Epic’s store in Japan.

  • The development reflects ongoing global antitrust momentum challenging Apple’s closed ecosystem, as DMA-like rules spread across jurisdictions.

Summary based on 6 sources


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