Supreme Court Will Hear Apple's Appeal in Epic Games App Store Fight - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Supreme Court Will Hear Apple's Appeal in Epic Games App Store Fight

The United States Supreme Court has agreed to hear Apple's appeal against the contempt ruling that forced it to change its App Store linking rules, reports Reuters.

app store blue banner epic 1
In a statement to MacRumors, Apple said the court's decision was welcome news.

This is an important question of law and we are pleased the Supreme Court will hear our case.

Apple asked the Supreme Court to review the decision back in May, and it was unclear if the request would be granted because the court previously declined to weigh in on the dispute. The 2024 denial involved the original Epic Games vs. Apple commission battle, but the case has since gotten spicier and piqued the Supreme Court's interest.

Apple largely won the Epic Games case in 2021 and wasn't found to have violated antitrust law, but Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, the judge overseeing the case, ordered Apple to relax its anti-steering rules and let developers link to alternate payment options in apps. Apple agreed, but ended up charging a 12 to 27 percent fee on link-outs instead of 15 to 30 percent. When adding in fees to payment processors, developers got more hassle with little to no discount, which resulted in few developers using the new link system.

‌Epic Games‌ accused Apple of violating the judge's order, and took Apple back to court. Gonzalez Rogers agreed with Epic, and in April 2025, found Apple in contempt of court for willfully violating the 2021 injunction. She barred Apple from collecting any fees on links in the U.S. App Store, and Apple changed its ‌App Store‌ rules to comply.

Apple appealed, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the contempt finding, leading Apple to further appeal to the Supreme Court.

Apple argued the contempt ruling was inappropriate because of the wording around the original order and Apple's implementation. The initial order did not bar Apple from charging fees when developers linked to third-party payment options, but both the district court and the appeals court said Apple violated the "spirit" of the injunction by charging fees that were too high. Apple said that a contempt ruling based on "spirit" instead of the word of the ruling is a "recipe for abuse." Apple is aiming to have the Supreme Court toss out the contempt decision because there was no clear and unambiguous violation.

Apple also asked the court to evaluate the scope of the injunction, which Apple said should apply only to ‌Epic Games‌ and not to all developers. Apple heavily leaned on Trump v. CASA, a recent ruling that said lower courts do not have the authority to issue universal injunctions to block nationwide policies.

In its request to the Supreme Court, Apple said the contempt ruling based on spirit and the order forcing it to change its policies for all developers "have combined to create an injunction that may reshape the global app marketplace." Apple's argument that the outcome of the case could lead to regulatory changes worldwide may also have swayed the court to weigh in on the case.

The Supreme Court will hear the case in its next term that begins in October after a summer break. While Apple waits for the Supreme Court decision, it will be going back to district court for fee calculations that will go into effect if the higher court does not toss out the contempt ruling and resulting anti-steering order. Apple was ordered back to district court because the appeals court found the district court's total ban on commissions went too far, and sent it back to set a reasonable fee.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

Popular Stories

wwdc 2026 apple design awards

Apple Announces This Year's App Design Award Winners Ahead of WWDC 2026

Tuesday June 2, 2026 10:18 am PDT by
WWDC is set to start on Monday, June 8, and ahead of the keynote event, Apple has announced the winners of its annual Apple Design Awards. The Apple Design Awards recognize apps and games for their innovation, ingenuity, and technical achievement. Apple chose one app and one game for each of the six award categories. Delight and Fun - Grug (App) and Is This Seat Taken? (Game) Innovati...
Liquid Glass App Store Feature

Apple Bringing App Store Age Verification to Texas as SB 2420 Takes Effect June 4

Wednesday June 3, 2026 12:52 pm PDT by
Apple today said App Store rules in Texas are changing due to the enforcement of SB 2420, a law that adds age assurance requirements for app marketplaces and developers. Apple users located in Texas will soon be required to confirm whether they are 18 years or older when creating an Apple Account. Apple Accounts for users under 18 must be part of a Family Sharing group, and parents need to...
Apple App Store Awards 2025

Apple Highlights App Store Study: $1.4 Trillion in Sales Last Year, More Than 90% Commission-Free

Thursday June 4, 2026 7:58 am PDT by
Apple today highlighted a new study by economists at Analysis Group that outlines four key App Store stats for 2025. Ahead of WWDC 2026 next week, Apple's core message with this press release is that the App Store is reaching new heights and that "developers continue to thrive globally." App Store ecosystem facilitated a record $1.4 trillion in total billings and sales Apple received no...

Top Rated Comments

1 day ago at 10:53 am
Apple is in the right. You can't just argue that the "spirit" of what was ruled is violated. "spirit" is purely subjective.

Blame the courts for not being specific enough.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
jhfenton Avatar
23 hours ago at 11:16 am
For the record, the SCOTUS only granted cert as to Question 1 in Apple's cert petition:


Whether a court may hold a party in civil contempt based on a violation of an injunction’s “spirit” where the injunction is silent as to the conduct upon which contempt is based, as the Ninth Circuit holds; or, instead, whether a court must ground a finding of civil contempt on the violation of an order that clearly and unambiguously proscribes the precise conduct at issue, as other circuits hold.
They didn't accept Apple's second QP regarding the appropriateness of the effectively nationwide injunction.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Mescagnus Avatar
22 hours ago at 12:52 pm
Maybe Epic will finally get what they rightly deserve: a big, fat bill.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
20 hours ago at 03:03 pm

Apple is in the right. You can't just argue that the "spirit" of what was ruled is violated. "spirit" is purely subjective.

Blame the courts for not being specific enough.
And the courts weren’t “specific enough” because what they wanted Apple to do a thing that no other company with a digital content download service was doing. Passing a general “This is what all app store marketplaces should charge” can be backed up, though it’s still a losing case. “This is what specifically Apple should charge” is another thing entirely.

This was going to hinge on if they took the case or not (as they could have simply refused). The fact that THIS court has decided to hear it means they don’t like how it’s playing out and want to put their stamp on it. Could soon be that Epic has lost 10 out of 10 of the cases brought forward.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
zarmanto Avatar
21 hours ago at 02:07 pm

Apple is in the right. You can't just argue that the "spirit" of what was ruled is violated. "spirit" is purely subjective.
Agreed -- that, alongside this:


... Apple heavily leaned on Trump v. CASA, a recent ruling that said lower courts do not have the authority to issue universal injunctions to block nationwide policies. ...
... are the two prongs of Apple's rebuttal which I think most attracted the attention of the Supreme Court. Apple linking their arguments with the CASA ruling obviously appealed to the court's ego, since that was one of their recent rulings that I'm sure the justices involved would dearly love to reinforce with another parallel ruling, and Apple helpfully providing them with more ways to reign in those courts by offering up the similar "spirit" argument on a sliver platter was likely the icing on the cake.

It would not surprise me at all if the court responds to those two arguments, but chooses to send any other issues and arguments right back to the lower courts for further consideration, under the newly scoped guidance.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
20 hours ago at 03:09 pm
Honestly, hard to know what to think when this Supreme Court is involved.

Today we learned that four of the justices don’t agree with a plain language reading of the constitution.. a position that various associations have said should get one disbarred.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)

🔗 Related Apple News & Rumors

Stay updated with the latest Apple ecosystem news and verified rumors