The news: Apple’s recent earnings call revealed more than record hardware sales—it also previewed the scale of a closed advertising system built on 2.5 billion active devices.
Each device represents a logged-in user inside Apple’s ecosystem—spanning App Store search, Apple News, Apple TV, Maps, and payments—where identity and commerce stay glued on Apple’s rails.
The company brought in a net income of $42 billion on revenues of $143.8 billion, an all-time high.
Why it matters: Apple’s ad business is expanding in lockstep with its hardware dominance. The company led the global smartphone market in 2025 with a 20% market share and 10% YoY growth, per Counterpoint.
We forecast Apple’s US ad revenues will reach $8.53 billion in 2026 and climb 11% YoY to $9.47 billion in 2027. Growth is moderating, but Apple’s base is expanding steadily, indicating a maturing platform.
Zooming in: Apple’s audience may be smaller than Google Play’s, but it generates outsized revenues relative to download share—a reminder that value beats volume.
As privacy rules curb third-party tracking, Apple’s first-party data and hardware control deepen its hold on high-intent demand. However, expected hardware shortages in Q2 could slow momentum for the entire industry.
Implications for brands: More devices mean more monetizable surfaces. Apple Ads has evolved from a narrow App Store search product into a scaled performance channel embedded in moments of search, download, and subscription, per WebProNews.
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