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Mobile app development in the UK is often misunderstood from a cost perspective, with estimates ranging from a few thousand pounds to several hundred thousand depending on who you ask and what they are actually describing. Honest UK pricing for mobile app development in 2024.
Last updated: 9 May 2026
Mobile app development in the UK typically costs between £25,000 and £200,000 for a production-ready application, with simple apps at the lower end and complex, feature-rich applications with backend systems and integrations at the upper end. Very basic apps with limited functionality can sometimes be delivered for £10,000 to £25,000, but anything requiring user accounts, data persistence, API integrations, or offline capability will quickly move above this range.
These figures represent the cost of building a quality application that can be submitted to the Apple App Store and Google Play Store with confidence. They are not the cost of a prototype, a clickable demo, or an MVP with minimal functionality. A genuine prototype costs £5,000 to £15,000. A Minimum Viable Product with core functionality and real users costs £25,000 to £60,000. A full-featured consumer or enterprise application costs £75,000 to £250,000 or more.
It is worth being specific about what is included in these ranges. They cover design (UX research, wireframing, UI design), development (both front-end and back-end), testing (functional and device testing), and submission to app stores. They do not typically cover ongoing maintenance, feature updates, marketing, or app store fees.
Several factors have the largest impact on what your mobile app will cost to build. Understanding them helps you make informed decisions during the scoping phase rather than being surprised by the final proposal.
Platform choice is the first major factor. Building for iOS only, Android only, or both simultaneously affects cost significantly. A native iOS or Android app costs less than building both natively because you are commissioning one codebase. Cross-platform frameworks such as React Native and Flutter allow a single codebase to run on both platforms, which can reduce development cost by 30 to 50 per cent compared to dual native development. However, cross-platform apps can have limitations in performance, access to device-specific features, and platform-specific UX conventions. For most UK business applications, React Native or Flutter is an excellent choice. For apps that need deep device integration, maximum performance, or a highly platform-specific user experience, native development is worth the additional investment.
Complexity and feature count are the second major factor. Each feature costs time to design, build, and test. Common features and their approximate cost contributions include: user authentication (£2,000 to £5,000), push notifications (£1,500 to £3,000), payment processing (£3,000 to £8,000), real-time chat or messaging (£8,000 to £20,000), mapping and location services (£3,000 to £8,000), offline functionality (£5,000 to £15,000), and third-party API integrations (£2,000 to £8,000 per integration). These figures are approximate and additive; a feature-rich app that includes all of the above will cost proportionally more than the sum of its parts because of the integration and testing complexity that arises when features interact.
Backend infrastructure is the third major factor and one that is often underestimated. Most mobile apps require a backend API, a database, and hosting infrastructure. If you are building a consumer app expecting significant scale, backend architecture decisions made at the start have major implications for long-term cost. A well-designed backend for a straightforward business application costs £10,000 to £30,000 to build and £500 to £2,000 per month to run, depending on usage. A backend built for scale from the start costs more upfront but avoids expensive rearchitecting later.
Design complexity is the fourth factor. A simple, functional UI following standard platform conventions costs less to design than a highly bespoke visual experience. Consumer apps that compete on aesthetics typically invest more in design. Enterprise apps used by internal teams can often adopt standard design patterns and invest the savings in functional capability instead. A thorough UX research and design phase for a mobile app runs from £8,000 to £30,000 depending on the number of user types and the complexity of the user flows.
Mobile app development agencies in London charge day rates of £600 to £1,200 for mid-level developers, rising to £1,500 for senior engineers and specialists in areas such as iOS performance optimisation or machine learning integration. Agencies outside London typically charge £400 to £900 per day for equivalent skills.
Freelance mobile developers charge broadly similar day rates but without the project management, QA, and design overhead that agencies include. A solo freelancer on £600 per day is not directly comparable to an agency at £700 per day if the agency's rate includes a project manager, a QA engineer, and access to design resources. Understand exactly what each rate covers before comparing.
Offshore development in India, Eastern Europe, or Southeast Asia costs £50 to £250 per day, which appears dramatically cheaper. In practice, coordination overhead, communication friction, quality variability, and the need for a London-based technical lead to manage the offshore team frequently closes the gap significantly. Businesses that have tried offshore development for their first app and then moved to a UK agency often describe the total cost difference as smaller than expected, while the quality difference was larger. That said, well-managed offshore development with an experienced UK lead can deliver genuine cost savings on straightforward projects with stable requirements.
Our mobile app development service in London uses a hybrid model that combines London-based project management and architecture with skilled development teams to deliver quality applications at competitive rates. We are transparent about how our teams are structured and can discuss which delivery model suits your project and budget.
Post-launch maintenance is consistently underbudgeted by businesses commissioning their first mobile app. The ongoing costs are real and unavoidable, and failing to budget for them leads either to a deteriorating app or to unplanned expenditure.
Operating system updates are the most predictable ongoing cost. Apple and Google release major OS updates annually and minor updates throughout the year. Each update has the potential to break existing functionality, introduce new design requirements, or deprecate APIs your app depends on. Maintaining compatibility with the latest OS versions costs roughly £5,000 to £15,000 per year for a moderately complex app.
Bug fixes and user feedback incorporation represent another ongoing cost. Even well-tested apps encounter issues in the wild that did not appear in testing. Planning for a bug-fix budget of £2,000 to £8,000 in the three months after launch is prudent. Ongoing feature development, which most successful apps require to retain users, should be budgeted separately based on your feature roadmap.
Infrastructure costs for the backend typically run from £500 to £3,000 per month depending on usage volumes. For a consumer app with tens of thousands of users, backend costs can be higher. Monitoring tools, analytics platforms, and crash reporting services add a further £100 to £500 per month.
In total, a realistic annual maintenance and infrastructure budget for a production mobile app in the UK is £15,000 to £50,000, depending on the complexity of the app and the pace of feature development. Factor this into your investment case from the start.
A well-structured budget for a mobile app development project allocates funds across four phases: discovery, design, development and testing, and post-launch. The exact split depends on the nature of your project, but a useful starting framework is: 10 to 15 per cent on discovery, 15 to 20 per cent on design, 55 to 65 per cent on development and testing, and 10 to 15 per cent as a contingency for scope changes and unexpected complexity.
Do not skip the discovery phase to save money. A properly scoped project delivered on time and on budget costs less than a poorly scoped project that requires rework. Discovery investment consistently reduces overall project cost by clarifying requirements before development begins, which is when changes are cheap, rather than during development, when they are expensive.
Consider phasing your investment if budget is constrained. An MVP with core functionality costs significantly less than a full-featured application and can be in users' hands three to five months before the full version. User feedback from a live MVP is enormously valuable and frequently changes what features you choose to build next. This approach reduces financial risk considerably and is standard practice for UK startups and growth-stage businesses.
For businesses in London and across the UK considering their first mobile application, our software development service includes a free initial consultation to discuss requirements, explore options, and give a realistic budget range before you commit to a discovery phase.
Several costs frequently catch first-time app commissioners by surprise. App store fees are modest but real: Apple charges £99 per year for an Apple Developer Programme membership, and Google charges a one-off £25 for a Google Play Developer account. Both stores require apps to meet their guidelines, and failing review can delay launch by one to three weeks while issues are resolved.
Third-party service costs add up faster than expected. A standard production app might use services for authentication (Auth0, Firebase), push notifications (Firebase Cloud Messaging), payments (Stripe), analytics (Mixpanel or Amplitude), crash reporting (Sentry or Bugsnag), and email (SendGrid or Mailgun). Each of these is either free at low volumes with paid tiers as you scale, or has a fixed monthly cost. Mapping out these costs before development starts gives you a realistic ongoing operating expense forecast.
Content and data migration costs are often missed. If your app replaces an existing system or needs to be pre-populated with data, migrating that data is a project in itself. For complex data migrations, budget a separate line item rather than assuming it will be absorbed into development effort.
Testing on real devices is another overlooked cost. Most development agencies test on a defined set of devices and simulators, but the range of Android devices in particular is enormous. If you have a specific user base with known device preferences, factor in the cost of testing on those specific configurations. For consumer apps with broad audiences, a device testing service such as BrowserStack or Firebase Test Lab is worth the monthly fee.
Submitting a mobile app to the Apple App Store and Google Play Store is a process that surprises many first-time commissioners. Both stores require apps to meet technical and content guidelines before they are approved for distribution. Understanding the review process prevents it from becoming a source of unexpected delay at the end of an otherwise well-managed project.
Apple's App Store review process typically takes one to three days, though it can extend to a week during busy periods such as the weeks around major iOS releases. Apple's reviewers check for compliance with their Human Interface Guidelines, privacy requirements (including the App Privacy details that must be provided accurately), and content policies. Apps that handle payments must use Apple's in-app purchase system for digital goods, which has a 30 per cent commission on transactions. Apps that facilitate peer-to-peer payments or connect to external subscription services have different rules that your development team needs to plan for.
Google Play's review process is generally faster than Apple's, often completing within a day for new apps, though this is not guaranteed. Google Play requires a privacy policy for any app that collects personal data, which is mandatory for any app with user accounts. Both stores now require a data deletion mechanism for apps with user accounts, a requirement introduced to comply with evolving privacy regulations in the UK and EU.
Pre-launch testing via TestFlight (iOS) and Google Play's internal or closed testing tracks allows you to distribute builds to a defined group of testers before public launch without going through the full review process each time. Using these tools effectively reduces the number of review submissions required and allows real-device testing with genuine users throughout the development process. Factor four to six weeks from development completion to public availability when planning your launch timeline.
Need bespoke software built to your exact requirements? Softomate Solutions develops scalable, secure applications for UK businesses across every sector. Start your project or book a technical discovery call.
A simple mobile app with basic functionality, such as a content display app, a loyalty card app, or a booking app with no complex backend, typically costs £15,000 to £40,000 in the UK. This range assumes professional design, a native or cross-platform build for both iOS and Android, and submission to both app stores. Apps with user accounts, payment processing, or third-party integrations will cost more, typically £40,000 to £100,000 depending on scope.
A straightforward mobile app takes three to five months from project kick-off to app store submission. A moderately complex app with custom backend, multiple integrations, and detailed UX design takes five to eight months. Complex consumer apps or enterprise applications can take ten to eighteen months. These timelines begin after a discovery phase, which typically takes three to six weeks. Platform review by Apple or Google adds one to three weeks to the timeline after submission.
In the UK, iOS and Android have roughly equal market share, with iOS slightly dominant among higher-income demographics in London and major cities. If your target audience is corporate or professional, iOS first is a common approach. If you are targeting a broad consumer audience across all demographics, Android parity is important from launch.
For most UK business applications, yes. React Native and Flutter allow a single codebase to run on both iOS and Android, reducing development costs by 30 to 50 per cent compared to dual native development. The performance and capability gap between cross-platform and native has narrowed significantly over the past three years. For apps that require deep device integration, advanced graphics, or a highly platform-specific experience, native development remains the better choice.
Budget £15,000 to £40,000 per year for a production mobile app in the UK market. This covers OS update compatibility work (£5,000 to £15,000 per year), bug fixes and minor improvements (£3,000 to £10,000 per year), backend infrastructure (£6,000 to £24,000 per year), and third-party service costs (£1,200 to £6,000 per year). Feature development beyond bug fixes is an additional cost dependent on your roadmap. Underbudgeting for maintenance is one of the most common mistakes UK businesses make when commissioning their first mobile application.
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