Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Business
  5. Mobile
  6. News

Court records reveal how much revenue and profit Google has made from Android

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google doesn’t disclose revenue for the individual arms of its multifaceted company, but in a court hearing, an Oracle attorney revealed all the revenue and profit Android made over the last seven years. In addition, a transcript of the hearing was briefly made public, and it was not redacted.

According to the documents, Google’s Android made $31 billion in revenue and $22 billion in profit during the past seven years. Oracle’s attorney Annette Hurst reportedly used the figures to bolster the company’s case against Google and to prove that the company has more than enough money to pay Oracle the money it’s asking for. The ongoing lawsuit between the two companies concerns Google’s use of Java without licensing the product. Oracle has said it wants $1 billion in damages for the violation, but Google argues that the enterprise giant shouldn’t be able to copyright code.

Recommended Videos

Shortly after Android’s financial information was released, Google asked for the figures to be redacted and sealed, saying the operating system’s revenue and profit is “extremely sensitive information” and for the attorney’s eyes only. The transcript vanished from the electronic court records a few hours after the disclosure, reports Bloomberg. Although Google’s reasons for asking the court to reseal those documents are plain, the court itself has not given an official reason for the record removal.

If the trial goes in favor of Oracle, it might set a new precedent for software and services that use licensed programming software. Fortunately for developers, Google is already starting to move from Java to OpenJDK, an open-source version from Oracle. It’s unclear how the leak will affect the outcome of the case, but it certainly has spurred some discussion of Android’s profitability, especially in comparison with Apple’s iOS.

Google mainly makes revenue on Android from mobile advertising sales and Google Play purchases, though we aren’t sure what portion of Android’s total revenue is related to the figures revealed this week. Comparing the reported figures to Apple’s own revenue on iOS shows that Google is $9 billion behind Apple, which reported $40 billion in total revenue from the iOS App Store since 2008. The reported figures also help identify Android’s role in Google’s overall finances. The company reported $66 billion in revenue and $17 billion in profit in 2014 alone.

David Curry
Former Contributor
David has been writing about technology for several years, following the latest trends and covering the largest events. He is…
OxygenOS made OnePlus phones special. Now, it might go away forever
The Android skin that defined what a clean, fast phone could be is officially ending. ColorOS is what comes next.
Person holding OnePlus 15.

If you bought a OnePlus because of OxygenOS, for the relatively clean, fast, and actually-useful Android experience, your phone may be the last one to get it. 

According to a report from the Indian outlet Smartprix, OxygenOS and Realme UI are both reportedly being phased out. If accurate, everything would move to ColorOS, the skin atop Android on Oppo smartphones, globally, across all three brands.

Read more
This flower identification app turns every walk into Pokémon Go for plants
flormie lets iPhone users scan flowers, save them as collectibles, and build a calmer kind of real-world collection game.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

A new flower identification app wants daily walks to feel a little more like Pokémon Go, only with fewer raids and far less public phone shouting.

flormie is an iPhone app built around a simple loop. Find a flower outside, scan it, and add it to a growing collection. That turns a normal walk into a low-pressure nature hunt, without pretending every sidewalk needs battle mechanics.

Read more
Your iPhone will soon warn you before you fall for a scam
iOS 27's new Trust Insights system watches for signs of coercion during calls, texts, and email to help users avoid scams.
iOS 27 Trust Insights featured

Apple is introducing a new anti-fraud system with iOS 27 that's designed to catch scam attempts in real time. The framework, called Trust Insights, monitors user behavior during calls, text conversations, or email exchanges and can trigger a warning or add a verification step if it detects signs of manipulation.

How Trust Insights works

Read more