The EU General Court just told Apple what it probably didn’t want to hear: you’re a gatekeeper, and that’s final. The Luxembourg-based court dismissed Apple’s challenge against its designation under the Digital Markets Act on Wednesday, handing the European Commission a clean win in one of the first major judicial tests of the landmark regulation.
The ruling came as a trio of decisions delivered jointly. The court confirmed Apple’s gatekeeper designation for both the App Store and iOS in full, validating the European Commission’s original September 5, 2023 decision. A separate judgment found Apple’s challenge regarding its iMessage service inadmissible, meaning the court didn’t even get to the merits on that one.
The DMA entered into force in November 2022, and its obligations started applying to designated gatekeepers in March 2024. Apple was hit with a €500 million fine in April 2025 for anti-steering violations connected to its app distribution practices. That penalty targeted Apple’s rules that prevented developers from directing users to cheaper purchasing options outside the App Store. The gatekeeper designation now being court-affirmed means the legal foundation for that fine, and future enforcement actions, is significantly more solid.










