Skip to main content

It took a while, but Google Play Store now offers promo-code support for apps

play store subscription discount android app
Marcel de Grijs/123rf
Android users now have the chance to use Google Play Store promo codes for apps, a feature that since the store’s launch has been noticeable by its absence.

The iOS App Store has long offered promo code functionality, which allows developers to offer users free copies of their paid apps for review or promotional purposes.

Recommended Videos

Users lucky enough to get a code simply enter it during the Play Store transaction when prompted, or inside the app if it’s for an in-app purchase.

A post on Google’s developers blog, which announced the new promo codes, suggested different ways developers might want to use them:

  • A game could have a special item, such as a character or decoration, that’s only available to players who attend an event. The developer could distribute cards with promo codes at the event, and users would enter their promo code to unlock the item.
  • An app developer might distribute promo codes at local businesses, to encourage potential users to try the app.
  • An app developer might give out “friends and family” codes to its employees to share with their friends.

The app’s creator can choose whether to add an expiration date, too, while codes without cut-off dates will remain valid for a full year.

A few limitations to the new system were spotted by Phandroid. For example, the codes can’t be used for in-app subscriptions (purchases are OK), and developers can only dole out a maximum of 500 codes per quarter for each app of their apps.

Still, it’s clearly a useful addition for Android developers and users alike, and one many would’ve expected long ago. Now the codes are here, it’s a safe bet many marketing-minded app creators will be wasting little time in working them into their sales strategies in the hope of increasing their profile and getting their apps noticed.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Play ‘spot the difference’ with Google’s new Play Store logo
Google's redesigned Google Play logo.

Google Play, the app store where you likely get most of your Android apps, has turned 10 years old and to celebrate the anniversary, Google has thrown out the old logo and given the online store an entirely new one. Well, when we say “entirely new,” we may be pushing it a little, as the new Google Play logo is still a multi-colored triangle resembling a traditional play button, so don’t expect a huge change.

New Play logo (left) and old Play logo (right)

Read more
How to pre-order the Google Pixel 6a right now
The Google Pixel 6a. We see the back of the phone as it's laying on top a piece of wood.

We love a good midrange smartphone, and they don't get much better than Google's Pixel A range. Ever since the launch of the range with the Pixel 3a, Google's cut-price offerings have dominated the midrange Android market with a flagship-level camera, good performance, and excellent software support. Of course, they've rarely been the most attractive of options out there -- but that looks to be at an end with the Pixel 6a's release.

With the Tensor processor, an excellent camera, and the Pixel 6's distinctive design, it's clear Google is pulling out all the stops for the Google Pixel 6a. But where can you pre-order this new midrange king? We've checked the biggest carriers and retailers to find where you can reserve your new smartphone.

Read more
Google Play Store now offers third-party app payments, but only for some users
The Google Play store icon on an Android phone.

Google will now open up its Play Store as a result of the European Union's Digital Markets Act, the company announced today. Now, any developers distributing apps or games in Europe (the European Economic Area, to be precise) will be able to sidestep the Google Play billing system with no penalty. The change comes after a similar push in South Korea.

"As of today, Google will not remove or reject updates of non-gaming apps from participating developers for offering alternative billing systems for EEA users. Google Play’s billing system will continue to be required for apps and games distributed via Play to users outside the EEA and for games distributed to users within the EEA. We expect to expand billing alternatives to developers of gaming apps for their users in the EEA, in advance of the DMA's effective date," Google's Estelle Werth, director of EU Government Affairs and Public Policy, said in a blog post.

Read more