Most people today know something surprising:
A real website can be launched for less than $1 per year.
With ultra-cheap domains like .xyz or .shop and free hosting platforms like GitHub Pages, Cloudflare Pages, and Netlify, anyone can put a working site on the internet for almost nothing.
But this raises an important question:
If websites have become this cheap, what about mobile apps? Can you launch an app for the same price?
The answer is yes — and no — depending on what kind of “app” you mean.
Let’s break this down in a practical, modern way.
Why Websites Became Almost Free
In the past, running a website meant renting a server, installing software, and paying monthly hosting fees.
Today, a huge shift has happened:
Static websites can now be hosted for free on platforms like:
- GitHub Pages
- Cloudflare Pages
- Netlify
These services host HTML, CSS, and JavaScript for zero cost, at massive scale.
So the only real expense is:
- A domain name (often under $1 for the first year)
That’s how people launch real, live websites for less than the price of a cup of tea.
Why Apps Are Different
A website lives on the open internet.
An app does not.
Mobile apps must be distributed through:
- Google Play Store (Android)
- Apple App Store (iPhone)
These companies are gatekeepers. They charge fees not for technology — but for access to users.
That changes the economics completely.
The Cheapest Way to Launch an Android App
If you build an Android app using Flutter, React Native, or native Android tools, your development cost can be zero.
Free tools:
- Android Studio
- Firebase / Supabase free tiers
- Free hosting and APIs
But to publish the app publicly, Google requires:
- A one-time $25 developer account
Once paid, you can publish unlimited Android apps forever.
So:
The absolute minimum cost to launch a real Android app is $25.
No annual fees. Just once.
The Cost of Launching an iPhone App
Apple works very differently.
To publish even a single app, you must have:
- Apple Developer Program membership
- Cost: $99 per year
If you stop paying:
- Your app is removed
- Updates stop
- Users can no longer download it
So:
An iOS app always has a permanent yearly cost.
This is not technical — it is business.
The Hidden Trick: Websites That Are Apps
Here is where things get interesting.
Modern browsers support something called Progressive Web Apps (PWAs).
A PWA is:
- A website
- That installs like an app
- Runs full screen
- Works offline
- Sends notifications
- Works on Android, Windows, and even iPhones
Companies using this today include:
- Twitter Lite
- Uber Lite
- Starbucks
- Spotify Web
And here’s the key part:
PWAs do NOT require Google Play or the Apple App Store.
They live on the web.
So the cost is:
- Free hosting
- Cheap domain
Which means:
You can launch a real app-like product for under $1.
So What Is the Cheapest App in the World?
Ironically, it’s not a mobile app.
It’s a website that behaves like an app.
That’s why:
- Startups launch as websites
- They validate users
- They add mobile apps later
Because:
- Websites are open
- Apps are taxed
Final Cost Comparison
| Platform | Minimum Cost |
|---|---|
| Website | ~$1/year |
| Progressive Web App | ~$1/year |
| Android App (Play Store) | $25 one-time |
| iPhone App (App Store) | $99 per year |
The Real Lesson
The modern internet gives you two paths:
- Open web — cheap, fast, global
- App stores — controlled, expensive, gated
Smart founders use the web first.
Only when traction is real do they pay Apple and Google.
That is how today’s billion-dollar companies quietly start — not with apps, but with $1 websites that act like apps ߚ
Last Updated on January 12, 2026 by Admin
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