TL;DR
Apple and the DOJ are in early settlement talks on the 2024 iPhone antitrust case. Apple has made multiple offers. No trial date is set.
Apple has made multiple offers this year to close the case. It has already opened mini apps, RCS messaging, cloud streaming, and its NFC payment chip.
Apple and the DOJ are in early settlement talks on the 2024 iPhone antitrust case. Apple has made multiple offers. No trial date is set.
Apple and the US Department of Justice are in early discussions about settling the 2024 antitrust lawsuit that alleges Apple violated competition law through its iPhone ecosystem, Bloomberg reported on Thursday. Apple has made multiple offers this year to close the case. The discussions are active but there is no guarantee of an agreement, and no trial date has been set.
The DOJ sued Apple under the Biden administration alongside 19 states and the District of Columbia. The complaint alleged Apple blocked super apps, discouraged outside messaging solutions and cloud streaming apps, restricted rival digital wallets, and hindered smartwatch competition. Apple lost a bid to dismiss the case in June 2025. Apple is already dealing with the Supreme Court’s refusal to pause its contempt order in the Epic case, making a DOJ settlement all the more attractive to reduce its legal exposure.
Apple has already addressed several of the original complaints. It launched a mini apps programme, opened Messages to the RCS standard led by Google, allowed cloud-streaming apps, and opened the iPhone’s NFC payment chip to third-party apps. The Apple Watch still does not work with Android, but Apple has improved compatibility with non-Apple watches on the iPhone.
The Trump administration’s DOJ is pushing to settle antitrust cases inherited from the Biden era. Stanley Woodward, the No. 3 DOJ official overseeing antitrust, views settlements as a way to save taxpayer money and deliver faster consumer relief than multi-year litigation. Whether the 19 state attorneys general are part of the settlement talks is unknown. Regulators globally are pressing Apple to open its platforms, and a DOJ settlement could set the template for how much Apple concedes before its other cases reach trial.
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