San Francisco, April 19, 2026, 08:32 PDT
- Appfigures data shows a 60% year-over-year jump in new app releases on Apple’s App Store and Google Play for the first quarter.
- iOS releases jumped 80% during the quarter. So far in April, releases on both stores have climbed 104%.
- This boom stands to benefit both Apple and Google, yet it also ramps up pressure on their app review processes, fraud detection efforts, and app discovery challenges.
App launches surged in the first quarter, with Apple’s App Store and Google Play together seeing a 60% increase in new apps from a year ago—a surprising reversal for a mobile sector many tech execs thought AI would dampen, not boost. iOS apps in particular took off, jumping 80%, based on Appfigures data reported by TechCrunch.
The numbers are suddenly in focus as the conversation around AI and mobile takes a turn. Instead of making separate apps obsolete, chatbots and AI agents are fueling a fresh surge in app creation—AI coding tools seem to be making it easier, not harder, to launch new products. According to TechCrunch, April so far saw app releases jump 104% across both major stores, with iOS alone up 89%.
This trend is about platforms, too. Apple’s App Store and Google Play still dominate as the go-to highways for mobile app distribution, so the uptick means more content coming through their gates—more to review, more subscriptions, more in-app purchases, all on their turf. Launches on both stores jumped 60% year over year in Q1, according to numbers shared by Appfigures and reported by Tech in Asia.
The basic idea goes like this: platforms like Claude Code and Replit are making it easier for anyone to launch a mobile app, slashing the skill bar. It’s called “vibe coding”—that’s the shorthand for plugging in plain-language prompts and letting AI coding assistants handle the rest, from building to tweaking software. What started as a hobbyist’s trick is now showing up as a real factor in app-store listings. TechCrunch
The makeup of new apps is shifting. Games remained the biggest chunk of releases globally for the first quarter, Appfigures data cited by TechCrunch showed, but utilities shot up to the No. 2 slot. Productivity cracked the top five, while lifestyle jumped from fifth last year to third. Health and fitness took the last spot in the top five.
Apple isn’t buying the idea that AI agents will push apps aside. Greg “Joz” Joswiak, the company’s senior VP of worldwide marketing, took a light jab at speculation over the App Store’s future, saying reports of its demise in the age of AI “may have been greatly exaggerated,” according to TechCrunch. TechCrunch
There’s pushback, too. Nothing CEO Carl Pei declared at SXSW in March that “apps are going to disappear” as AI agents step in for more software tasks — a claim that now clashes with the most recent release data. TechCrunch
Apple’s been running into pushback from AI-powered app developers. Last week, TechCrunch said the company blocked updates or pulled apps from Replit, Vibecode, and Anything. Dhruv Amin, co-founder of Anything, told the outlet Apple took down Anything’s app back in March, later citing worries about code downloading or execution.
Still, there’s a downside to all this growth. More app submissions bring a spike in copycats, lower-quality releases, and potential scam apps. Apple’s review process has faced renewed questions after high-profile incidents: rewards app Freecash was yanked from the store soon after topping the charts, and a counterfeit Ledger Live app—available on Apple’s platform—has been connected to $9.5 million in stolen crypto, TechCrunch and CoinDesk have reported.
Apple insists its review process remains robust. According to its most recent fraud report, the company handled upwards of 7.7 million App Store submissions in 2024, denying over 1.9 million. It took down more than 37,000 apps tied to fraud and flagged another 320,000-plus for spam, imitation, or misleading content.
Forrester analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee told Business Insider that simply tightening app rejection won’t cut it for Apple. “This is not a problem Apple can reject its way out of; as AI accelerates app creation, the company will have to evolve from artisanal gatekeeping to curation at scale,” he said. Business Insider
U.S. equity markets didn’t open Sunday. Apple finished Friday at $270.23, while Alphabet ended the session at $341.68, market data show.