Categories: Tech & Society

WhatsApp finally launches a Freemium model for iOS

 

While messaging has become a veritable war with apps like Line, KakaoTalk, WeChat, Path and Facebook Messenger across Asia and Western markets, there’s been one longstanding app that’s presided over the space with very few apparent changes.

WhatsApp, the Sequoia-backed messaging app that dominates in Europe and that is often tipped as an attractive acquisition candidate for companies like Google and Facebook, just went freemium finally on iOS. The app has been paid for years on the iPhone at a $0.99 price point.

But today it went free with an annual subscription fee of $1 after the first year. This isn’t really a surprise as CEO Jam Koum talked about this several months ago. It brings WhatsApp’s business model on iOS in line with other platforms like Android, BlackBerry, Nokia and Windows Phone.

The paid app business model is really a vestige of an older era when developers would sell their work up-front. But over time, many paid apps have made the switch toward going free with paid features. Games really triggered this wave, but other high-usage apps like messaging have gone for a freemium strategy.

Japan’s Line, for example, made $58.9 million in the first quarter of this year in Japan through in-app purchases and sales of stickers — which apps like Path and Facebook Messenger have subsequently copied.

WhatsApp launched back in 2009 and quickly grew popular in markets where SMS pricing made messaging through smartphone apps cheaper. It really dominates in European markets and has a strong foothold in India, as well.

Recently, the company said it was bigger than Twitter with more than 200 million monthly actives, 10 billion messages sent and 17 billion received in a single day.

Via: TechCrunch

 

Image Credit: Martin Hajek

 

Team TechPanda

Recent Posts

From CISO to risk architect: How security leadership is changing in 2026

For much of the last decade, the CISO role was defined by defense: reduce incidents,…

17 hours ago

Union Budget 2026: What India’s Fintech sector wants from the next wave of reforms

As India’s fintech ecosystem matures from rapid experimentation to large-scale adoption, expectations from Union Budget…

17 hours ago

Union Budget Expectations: Gaming industry after the ban of real money gaming

The ban on Real-Money Gaming (RMG) in India in 2025 marked a watershed moment for…

17 hours ago

From play to powerhouse: How India’s gaming economy is scaling at record speed

India’s gaming story is no longer about casual downloads, it’s about scale, sophistication, and global…

3 days ago

India’s tech pulse: Ecosystem harkat & the shifting investment temperament

The Tech Panda examines the forces shaping ecosystem behavior and investment sentiment in India. JioBlackRock…

3 days ago

Pre-budget Wishlist: “Pivot from viewing AI as a mere software vertical to treating it as strategic national infrastructure”

As India prepares for the Union Budget 2026, Artificial Intelligence has emerged as a central…

3 days ago