up vote 44 down vote favorite
25
share [g+] share [fb]

My team and I have an app which we're going to be submitting to the store pretty soon, but we know that we'll be selling the app to another company in the near future. Does anyone have any experience with moving an app's ownership to another account?

Specifically, when I sell an app to another company...

... how do we move the app to their account (what's the mechanism)? ... can my users still get updates (released by the new owner) without having to re-buy/re-download the app?

link|improve this question

25% accept rate
feedback

protected by Will Sep 9 '10 at 16:56

This question is protected to prevent "thanks!", "me too!", or spam answers by new users. To answer it, you must have earned at least 10 reputation on this site.

11 Answers

Follow Up: After all: it is possile (as of late March 2010).

I haven't read all comments or other threads about this issue, so this might be obsolete, but it seems it's basically related to the iTunes-related structure of the appStore.

You can't be part of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones Bands...

Anyway, eventually, a colleague managed to get things sorted out, and we got our App (which was running under my private, single Dev account) running under a new, enterprise account. We kept our ratings, our #1 place in our category in the appstore, and all in all it went smooth (after several hours of phone-calls with apple).

As far as I can recall, the main problem was those help-desk folks were knowing things were going to change, but they didn't know by when and how. Probably due to iPad coming and related timelines involved). Anyway. It's possible, and it's pretty easy. Send your request, wait a couple of weeks (might be days by now), and you'll have the transfer. One issue though: They may have some bug in their migration code, because apple mixes firstname and lastname of the dev / master account after migration. well, who cares.

link|improve this answer
3  
Can you provide more details or a link that explains this? I have not seen anything anywhere that changing the owner account for an app is possible. Your post sounds like someone in Apple dug in the database and replaced IDs in the database. :) – Aleksandar Vacic Nov 18 '10 at 11:03
4  
Where did you send your request for the change, the help desk (which one) or someone else? – BryanH May 19 '11 at 16:05
feedback

Sounds like a question for Apple Support.

link|improve this answer
Sadly Apple Support has a pretty slow turn around time :( I have an email out waiting for the official word, though. – kfitzpatrick Mar 23 '09 at 17:18
Waited a month, Apple support gave the answer provided by sam - stackoverflow.com/questions/671382/… – BadPirate May 16 '11 at 23:46
feedback

I had my own experience with this, and the answer I got from Apple Developer Relations (Although it took a month to get an email response and 6 weeks for the follow up phone call) was (in short) that they currently don't offer any way to transfer individual applications from one developer account to another.

He did so by saying that there was a single "Option" for doing this sort of transfer, which is to delete the app from the account that it is currently on, and then resubmit to the Apple store from the new account under the same name (but it would have a new appstore id). I pointed out (and he acknowledged) that this would delete any existing user reviews, ruin the upgrade path for existing users, break iAds, in-app purchases, and game center integration. So it really isn't a solution at all.

He also said that it isn't possible to transfer ownership of all your apps to another existing account (they seem to lack the granularity to move individual apps). However if I wanted to give up all my apps to another individual it could be possible by creating a corporation (probably S-Corp, although he didn't advise), transferring ownership of my account to the S-Corp (which would be allowed if I were a part owner), and then selling the s-corp to the new owner. (Yikes right?)

The method I plan to go with is the following (I'll update with my success), In my specific case I have a paid application that (.99) that I'm trying to transfer to another owner:

  1. I will create a lightweight application using the same AppID that is designed to inform users that the Application has changed owners, and provide a link to the app store where they can download the new application. When launched will upload a hashed form of their UDID to a server (which I will now have to maintain) listing them as a previous customer.

  2. I will upload this new lightweight app to my existing account as an upgrade to the other existing application (so that when users update, they will instead be marked as an existing customer, be presented with a message explaining the situation, and a link to the new app)

  3. I will convert my paid app to being a light application that has some functionality, but requires an in-app purchase of .99 to get the full functionality. Additionally, this new app will check with my server to see if the UDID is in the existing customers database, and if so give them full functionality (without having to do the in-app purchase).

... ARGHH! :) It's an ugly experience for the customers and a whole hell of a lot of work for the developer... but the only option provided by Apple. (Although, I'm not sure that it will even work, as it's entirely possible that they will reject my lightweight "update" application from the store, and thereby prevent the hack upgrade path as well)

link|improve this answer
feedback

Official answer is No. From the iTunes Connect FAQ:

I sold my app to another developer and can no longer distribute on the App Store. Can I transfer the app to the new developer's iTunes Connect account?

At this time, apps cannot be transferred to another developer account. If you would like the app to be sold through another developer account, you will need to remove the app from sale in the current iTunes Connect account and upload the app under the new iTunes Connect account.

Uploading the app to a new iTunes Connect account will disable current customers from receiving automatic and free updates of your application. All customer reviews, rating and ranking information will also be reset.

link|improve this answer
feedback

What Lou Franco said.

Where To example is really good to consider, as they eventually had to settle for the fact that all existing customers need to buy the app again. Apple simply does not have the background infrastructure to change ownership.

Another bad consequence of the inherited made-for-music-sale-machine that iTunes originally was. Songs apparently don't change owners.

See here, for Where to resolution: http://www.futuretap.com/blog/transferring-an-iphone-app-last-episode/

link|improve this answer
feedback

From what I understand, this can be done, but it requires manual intervention by the iTunes Store team, can take months to go through, and may involve some periods when your app is not on sale under either account. If you know who your customer is going to be, just put it under their account to begin with. If not, remember for the future that flipping apps is not an easy thing to do, and adjust your business model accordingly.

link|improve this answer
feedback

As ownership transfer is currently not-supported and an "exception process", it makes sense not to count on it as your mode of operation.

The big problem you're facing is: the app is tied to a developer account and you want to keep YOUR developer account after you transfer the app.

Hence, why not set up a NEW developer account, the sole purpose of which is to be the holder of this one app and, when you sell the app, you can just transfer the developer-account credentials to the new owner.

At that point, they can update the name, address, company name, bank info, etc.

Of course, your transfer contract will have some verbiage explaining how, in the interim, any moneys you get from Apple will be fwded to the new owner (put a time limit -- like 90 days -- on this so they don't take forever to update the info.)

I've not tried this, but it seems like a viable solution. Again, the problem is that the app is tied to developer account and you don't want to transfer yours. Hence, this Just Makes Senseā„¢.

link|improve this answer
feedback

As far as I know there is no way to transfer apps to a different user/company. I think the app should be in your customers account from the beginning. Otherwise you probably have payment problems too (people paying you instead of your customer).

Why not just sell the app to a customer before releasing it. If they want to see it running before it is released, just sent them a version built with an ad-hoc certificate.

link|improve this answer
This doesn't answer the question of transferring ownership of an app to another entity. Your answer is only relevant for a contractor, but not for, say, Roxio wanting to sell Angry Birds to EA without selling itself. – KPM May 11 '11 at 12:15
Here's a real-world example: I write an app for a customer (I'm a contractor) and they do not yet have their account, BUT they want the app developed and released ASAP. Release goes well and they finally get their enterprise developer account. How do I transfer the app from my personal dev account to theirs? – BryanH May 19 '11 at 16:00
feedback

The are additional considerations:

If you just can switch ownership of the Application behind the scenes, thus changing the contract, but not the application itself, you might be fine.

But if you're just going to transfer your source code, the future owner of the app will have to sign it with his own certificate, which will basically render the app as a "new" one.

Users will lose their settings (if your app did some configuration persistence) and they'll lose the app history in the appstore (ranking, etc.).

link|improve this answer
1  
Apps are identified by bundle identifier, not by certificate. If you were correct, my own app wouldn't have been upgraded since I had to recreate a cert between releases. – benzado Mar 26 '09 at 1:00
Sorry, on second read I see you are saying to simply re-upload the app into another account. – benzado Mar 26 '09 at 1:02
feedback

The problem will be that the cert will be tied to your account. If it has a different cert, it's a different app. This means that people who have your version can't upgrade to theirs (unless they have your cert and keep having access to it). At the very least, make sure you make one that is specifically only used for that application. I don't know if they expire, but if they did, the other company would have to trust you to keep making them.

The high-profile app, "Where to", was sold after release. You might want to research about how it was done.

link|improve this answer
Apps are identified by bundle identifier, not by certificate. If you were correct, my own app wouldn't have been upgraded since I had to recreate a cert between releases. – benzado Mar 26 '09 at 1:00
feedback

I don't believe that you can transfer ownership to another account. But a simple solution would be to add url schemes to your app to allow data to be transferred from your app to a new app that your customer would release with the same source.

The new app would have to be free though (maybe the lite version?), so your old customers wouldn't be forced into buying it again. The only real downside I can see of this is that the new app would basically be starting over again from a marketing perspective, which is no minor thing of course!

Mobile Orchard had an article on data migration from Lite to Paid versions of an application that may be of interest:

http://www.mobileorchard.com/lite-to-paid-iphone-application-data-migrations-with-custom-url-handlers/

link|improve this answer
feedback

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.