Google will let Android developers use rival payments systems in Europe

Google will let Android developers use rival payments systems in Europe


An Android statue is displayed in front of a building on the Google campus on January 31, 2022 in Mountain View, California. Google parent company Alphabet will report fourth quarter earnings on Tuesday after the closing bell.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Google will let nongaming app developers use rival payments systems on its Android operating system for some European users, the company announced Tuesday.

It’s a change that the company has resisted in the past and so far is not extending beyond Europe. The move comes after the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, passed the Digital Markets Act, a broad set of rules that aim to curb the market power of so-called digital gatekeepers.

The legislation prohibits large tech firms from preferencing their own services over rivals that rely on app stores. A key bill aimed at Big Tech in the U.S. shares similar goals but has yet to be scheduled for a vote on the Senate floor.

Google wrote in a blog post that its change, which will take effect in the European Economic Area that includes EU member states and a few other countries, was a way to try to comply with the DMA.

Fellow app store operator Apple has been vocal with concerns that allowing alternate payment systems could weaken security for users. Google said developers using a different billing system in the EEA “will need to meet appropriate user protection requirements.”

Developers that choose to use a different billing system will still need to pay service fees to Android and the Play Store and adhere to its conditions. But those fees for developers to Google will be lowered by 3% when a consumer opts for a different billing system. The company said that will typically translate to a change from a 15% fee to a 12% fee for many developers.

While Google said its Play Store billing system will continue to be required for apps on its marketplace distributed outside the EEA, it plans to expand billing alternatives to gaming app developers for users within Europe ahead of the DMA’s effective date.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

WATCH: Google faces fast and furious pace of lawsuits as antitrust scrutiny intensifies



Source

Rocket maker Firefly Aerospace files to go public under ticker FLY
Technology

Rocket maker Firefly Aerospace files to go public under ticker FLY

Firefly Aerospace CEO Jason Kim sits for an interview at the Firefly Aerospace mission operations center in Leander, Texas, on July 9, 2025. Sergio Flores | Reuters Rocket maker Firefly Aerospace filed for an initial public offering on Friday, with plans to trade under the ticker symbol “FLY” on the Nasdaq. Firefly’s planned offering comes […]

Read More
Robinhood is up 160% this year, but several obstacles are ahead
Technology

Robinhood is up 160% this year, but several obstacles are ahead

Robinhood stock hit an all-time high Friday as the financial services platform continued to rip higher this year, along with bitcoin and other crypto stocks. Robinhood, up more than 160% in 2025, hit an intraday high above $101 before pulling back and closing slightly lower. The reversal came after a Bloomberg report that JPMorgan plans […]

Read More
Bill Gates says Trump’s cuts to USAID are devastating: ‘It’s not too late to reverse them’
Technology

Bill Gates says Trump’s cuts to USAID are devastating: ‘It’s not too late to reverse them’

Bill Gates speaks with Reuters during an interview in New York City, U.S., May 8, 2025. Mike Segar | Reuters Bill Gates, the philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder, on Friday said it’s not too late to reinstate international aid funding that President Donald Trump cut off. The Trump administration placed staff members at the U.S. Agency […]

Read More