Apple has notified the European Commission that two of its widely used services, Apple’s advertising business and Apple Maps,meet the regulatory thresholds set out in the European Union’s Digital Markets Act (DMA).
The acknowledgment, confirmed this week, sets in motion a formal review that could determine whether Apple must operate these services under the EU’s strict gatekeeper rules.
The Commission now has 45 working days to evaluate Apple’s submission and reach a conclusion. If either service is designated as a gatekeeper platform, Apple would be given six months to make structural, technical, and operational changes to comply with the regulation.
At the core of the Commission’s review is whether Apple’s ad services and Apple Maps play a “gatekeeper” role within Europe’s digital ecosystem. Apple’s confirmation that its services cross the act’s quantitative thresholds brings the company closer than ever to deeper EU oversight.
If designated, Apple would face stringent obligations. Its advertising arm, for example, would be required to provide free access to measurement tools and independent verification data for advertisers and publishers. This would represent a substantial shift for Apple, which has long emphasized privacy-driven data limitations within its ecosystem.
Apple Maps, too, could face new interoperability requirements. Under Article 6(7) of the DMA, Apple would be required to allow third-party services to plug into the same hardware and software capabilities, without charge and without restrictions.
A gatekeeper designation would require Apple to make significant operational changes. The company would no longer be able to combine personal data across its services without obtaining explicit user consent, potentially limiting how it leverages information from the App Store, Safari, and Maps for ad targeting or personalized recommendations.
Additionally, Apple would need to ensure greater interoperability, allowing external developers to access the same system-level functionalities that its own apps currently enjoy. Advertisers would also benefit from enhanced transparency, gaining continuous, real-time access to both aggregated and non-aggregated data for independent performance verification, a long-standing demand from the ad-tech community.
Europe’s advertising-technology sector is already watching the situation closely. A gatekeeper designation for Apple’s ad business would open the door to data and measurement tools that third-party firms have never had access to before.
With this new visibility, ad-tech companies could build dashboards that compare Apple’s ad performance directly with platforms like Meta and Alphabet, design more advanced attribution models using the real-time data required under the DMA, and prepare new analytics products based on the precedents set by other companies already designated as gatekeepers.
Google’s own push for consistent DMA enforcement has further emboldened smaller firms, who argue that true competition is only possible if all major platforms, including Apple, offer equal access to essential advertising data.
The Commission’s upcoming decision carries implications far beyond Apple. The case will test how far the EU is willing to go in applying the DMA to platform services that have historically operated behind tightly controlled walls.
For Apple, the next 45 working days will determine whether its advertising engine and Maps service must undergo a major operational overhaul within the EU. For advertisers, developers, and analytics firms, the decision could mark a turning point, one that opens the door to data access and interoperability they have long sought but never received.
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