Stock Markets April 21, 2026 02:32 AM

Australian Regulator Cleared to Weigh In on Epic Games v Apple Remedies

Federal Court grants ACCC leave to intervene in relief hearings after earlier ruling that Apple breached competition laws

By Ajmal Hussain AAPL GOOGL
Australian Regulator Cleared to Weigh In on Epic Games v Apple Remedies
AAPL GOOGL

Australia's competition regulator, the ACCC, has received Federal Court permission to participate in upcoming relief hearings in the Epic Games v Apple dispute and to advise on potential remedies for Apple. The move follows a court finding last year that Apple restricted alternate app distribution and in-app payments, with Google also found in breach and having reached a global settlement with Epic. The relief hearing will resume on April 28.

Key Points

  • The Federal Court has granted the ACCC permission to intervene in the Epic Games v Apple relief hearings and to recommend remedies for Apple - impacting mobile app distribution and in-app payment practices in Australia.
  • A court previously found Apple breached competition laws by restricting alternative app distribution and in-app payments; Google was also found in breach and reached a global settlement with Epic - affecting major tech platform policies and the digital payments ecosystem.
  • Epic, backed by Tencent, sued Apple and Google after Fortnite was removed from app stores when Epic introduced its own in-game payment system that circumvented approximately 30% commission fees - relevant to gaming and app monetisation sectors.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) announced Tuesday that the Federal Court has authorised it to intervene in the Epic Games v Apple litigation and to offer recommendations on any remedies that may be imposed on Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL).

In a press release, the ACCC said it obtained leave from the Federal Court to take part in the forthcoming relief hearings connected to the dispute. The regulator will be positioned to make submissions about what corrective measures should be ordered against Apple.

This development comes after a court ruling last year found Apple in breach of competition laws for limiting the use of alternative app distribution channels and third-party in-app payment systems on its devices. Alphabet Inc's (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google was also found to have breached competition law in the same matter and subsequently entered a global settlement agreement with Epic.

Epic Games, which counts Chinese gaming conglomerate Tencent (HK:0700) as a backer, initiated legal action against both Apple and Google after the companies removed the widely played game Fortnite from their app stores. That removal followed Epic's implementation of its own payment processing inside Fortnite, allowing players to bypass the roughly 30% commission that Apple and Google charge on in-app purchases.

"This is a significant competition law matter, and the orders made in these proceedings could have wide-ranging implications for the distribution of mobile apps and in-app payments in Australia," ACCC Commissioner Luke Woodward said.

The relief hearing - where judges will consider what remedies should be applied to Apple following the earlier finding of a breach - is scheduled to resume on April 28.


For market participants, the ACCC's participation formalises a regulatory voice in the remedy phase of a high-profile technology antitrust dispute. The court's earlier determinations and Google's separate settlement with Epic already set a legal backdrop; the ACCC's contributions at the relief hearing will focus on the form and scope of corrective orders that could affect how mobile apps are distributed and monetised in Australia.

While the specifics of any final orders remain to be determined at the resumed hearing, the matter continues to directly involve major technology platforms, the economics of app store commissions, and the business models of game publishers and other app developers that rely on in-app payments.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over the specific remedies the court will impose on Apple, which may have direct consequences for app distribution and payment flows in the mobile ecosystem - impacting app stores, developers, and digital payments.
  • Potentially wide-ranging implications for how mobile apps are distributed and monetised in Australia, as noted by the ACCC commissioner, creating regulatory and commercial uncertainty for platform operators and app publishers.
  • The ongoing nature of the relief hearing process, which resumes on April 28, means market participants and stakeholders must wait for judicial determinations before understanding the eventual legal and operational outcomes.

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