Google has reached a settlement with Epic Games to resolve their long-running antitrust dispute, paving the way for Fortnite's return to the Google Play Store worldwide. The agreement includes reduced fees for developers and support for third-party app stores on Android. Changes are set to roll out starting in June in select regions.
The settlement between Google and Epic Games, announced on March 4, 2026, aims to end a dispute that began in 2020 when Epic pulled Fortnite from the Google Play Store over billing fees. A US court ruled against Google in 2023, leading to remedies in 2024 that threatened the Play Store's model. An initial agreement came in late 2025, with updates now to satisfy court approval.
Epic CEO Tim Sweeney confirmed on X: "Fortnite will return to Google Play Store worldwide soon. Epic Games Store continues supporting Android worldwide alongside Windows and Mac, and installation on Android will become much easier later in 2026."
Under the deal, Google will lower its service fees significantly. For new installs, the in-app purchase fee drops to 20% from 30%, with recurring subscriptions at 10%. More detailed rates include a 5% Google billing fee plus 15% service for new in-app content installs, 20% for existing ones, and 15% for flat-rate app purchases on new installs. Developers can now offer alternative payment options alongside Google's or guide users to external websites.
Google is introducing a "Registered App Stores" program, allowing third-party stores to meet quality and safety benchmarks for streamlined installation on Android. Participating stores will access the Play Store's app catalog, though developers can opt out. The program launches internationally first, with US rollout pending court approval.
Fee changes begin in the US, UK, and European Economic Area by June 30, 2026, expanding to Australia by September 30, Korea and Japan by December 31, and globally by September 2027. Additional programs like Google Play Games Level Up and App Experience launch in select regions on September 30, 2026.
The settlement also involves a separate $800 million partnership for product development. Both companies express support, resolving the dispute globally pending US Judge James Donato's approval.