App Store dominates Google Play on Christmas Day app sales

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in iOS
Apple's App Store enjoyed a bumper holiday season, with iPhone and iPad users spending more on Christmas 2019 than in 2018 by 16%, a rise that has also helped boost global app spending across all of December over the previous year.




Consumers are continuing to spend considerably high amounts in the iOS App Store and Google Play during Christmas, with Sensor Tower estimating there was $277 million spent on Christmas Day 2019 alone. The figure is a year-on-year increase of 11.3% from the same day in 2018.

It is believed consumer spending in apps and mobile gaming on Christmas Day accounts for 5% of revenue for the stores in the month of December. In total, December sales reached almost $5.1 billion, an 8% increase from the $4.7 billion spent in December 2018.

Sales are thought to be due to mobile devices being given as gifts, with first-time mobile users and consumers who've received cash and gift cards eager to spend money on their new hardware.

On a per-store basis, the App Store continues to account for the vast majority of revenue, bringing in approximately $193 million on Christmas Day itself. Compared to 2018, the day's spend represents year-on-year growth of about 16%.

Apple's revenue accounts for around 70% of the total spend across both platforms, with the Google Play store achieving $84 million. With the Android marketplace seeing smaller growth of 2.7%, this makes Apple's App Store the driving force for app revenue on that day alone.




This is a continuation from earlier in the year, where one Sensor Tower report from July revealed the App Store made nearly 1.8 times the revenue of the Google Play Store over the first half of 2019.

Gaming is still the biggest category with regard to revenue, with it accounting for 76% or $210 million of revenue across both stores on Christmas Day alone, up 8% year-on-year. Non-game apps made up $67 million in sales, gaining 2% in terms of share over the year before, and with a year-on-year growth in revenue of 24%.

Of these non-gaming apps, entertainment services providing video-on-demand like Disney and Tencent Video made up the biggest amount of these purchases. Video services made up 24% of non-gaming Christmas Day revenue on the App Store.

The biggest non-game app in terms of Christmas Day spending across both platforms was Tinder, achieving nearly $2.1 million in revenue over that 24-hour period.

Sensor Tower also provided details about US-specific spending, which saw growth, albeit not at the same level as the global data. Users in the United States spent 4.8 percent more in apps on Christmas Day 2019 than in 2018, a rise of just $4 million to $80 million across both the App Store and Google Play.

Gaming continues to be the main seller, making up 73% of sales at $58 million, but grew just 2% year-on-year. Non-gaming app spending grew a higher 13% year-on-year to $22 million.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    davgregdavgreg Posts: 1,037member
    Over on the media side, the store to buy movies and TV is a mess with the new apps and there seems no way to gift a movie anymore.

  • Reply 2 of 5
    I guess that will be music to the ears of those who want both the AppStore and PlayStore broken up due to Anti-trust issues.
  • Reply 3 of 5
    The Play Store will always generate less revenue.  It don't get no Chinese money.  Android app stores in China are all local, with Tencent being the largest.  Tencent is a beast that most people in the West seem to not to grasp their size and reach.
  • Reply 4 of 5
    The Play Store will always generate less revenue.  It don't get no Chinese money.  Android app stores in China are all local, with Tencent being the largest.  Tencent is a beast that most people in the West seem to not to grasp their size and reach.
    In addition, there are Amazon and Samsung app stores in the Android ecosystem. The Samsung app store is actually a thing in some Asian countries. Also, LOTS of entertainment revenue goes to Amazon Prime Video and Music for rentals/purchases especially for people who own the combo of an Android phone and a Fire TV device (plus there are Kindle ebooks). 

    Ultimately though this is just "inside baseball." The bottom line is both Google Play and the App Store are plenty profitable for Google and Apple, the App Store just more so. In contrast to, say, the Windows App Store, which yes does still exist for Windows 10 devices. Or the Chrome Web Store ... which amazingly actualy does have paid apps. It was supposed to be the Chrome OS analogue to the Google Play Store for Android ... but Google wisely eventually gave up and just enabled Android apps on Chrome OS (using containers which Apple incidentally could easily also do for iPad and iPhone apps on macOS but hey another story for another day). And don't forget Canonical's attempt to offer an "app store" on Ubuntu Linux back when they tried to make Ubuntu laptops and phones a thing. Or Mozilla's app store (similar to Google's web store for Chrome OS) when they tried to compete with Android with the Firefox phone. Still being in viable business and making a profit is a good thing. 
  • Reply 5 of 5
    Cannot wait for the quarterly report at the end of the month. All these apps being installed on new devices is another indication of a record quarter. 
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