
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to intervene in Epic v. Google, delivering yet another win to Epic Games. Google is now legally required to open up its Play Store on Android to third-party stores and payment systems, lowering fees for everyone and giving customers on that platform more choices.
“The Supreme Court has thrown out Google’s stay request,” Epic Games founder and CEO Tim Sweeney tweeted. “Starting October 22, developers will be legally entitled to steer US Google Play users to out-of-app payments without fees, scare screens, and friction – same as Apple App Store users in the US!”
Google petitioned the Supreme Court in late September after a spectacular series of court losses dating back to its historic antitrust loss against game maker Epic Games in December 2023. It was seeking a stay to the injunction forcing it to open up the Play Store and the Android app ecosystem so that it could evaluate the lawfulness of what Google says is an “unprecedented” action.
The Court denied the request without explanation.
Now, Google has until October 22 to meet its legal requirements. Which are:
These requirements will be in effect for three years, though some of the provisions won’t go into effect until mid-2026.