Minecraft on Apple’s App Store costs $6.99 in the U.S., with optional in-app purchases for Realms, Minecoins, and add-ons.
The price you see can change by country, tax rules, and App Store region. For a U.S. buyer, Minecraft by Mojang is a paid download, not a free app with the main game locked behind a subscription.
That one-time payment gets the mobile Bedrock version for iPhone and iPad. You can start a regular world, play Creative mode, survive nights, craft tools, build farms, and join many online options without paying a monthly fee. Extra spending begins only when you choose add-ons, paid Marketplace items, Minecoins, or a private Realm.
How Much Is Minecraft On App Store? Current Price Details
The current U.S. listing shows Minecraft at $6.99 with in-app purchases. The same listing names Mojang as the seller, gives the app a 9+ age rating, and marks the game for iPhone and iPad. You can verify the live price on the official Minecraft App Store listing before buying, since Apple may show a different total after taxes or regional currency conversion.
In plain terms, the $6.99 price is the entry ticket. It is not the full ceiling for every player, but it is enough for the core game. Many players spend months without buying anything else.
What The Base Purchase Gives You
The iPhone and iPad version is Minecraft: Bedrock Edition. That matters because Bedrock is the version used across mobile, Windows, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo Switch, and some other devices. If friends are on Bedrock too, cross-platform play is usually the smoother route.
The paid app includes Creative mode, Survival mode, local worlds, crafting, mobs, biomes, blocks, Redstone, commands, and online play options. You don’t pay each time you create a new world. You also don’t need Minecoins to play the base game.
What May Cost More Later
Optional purchases are where the total can grow. Minecraft has Realms for private hosted worlds, Realms Plus for a larger private server and rotating paid content, and Marketplace purchases for skins, texture packs, maps, and add-ons. The official Bedrock Realm purchase page explains the two Realm types and the 30-day trial path for eligible players.
Parents should check the in-app purchase settings on the Apple account before handing the game to a child. The game itself is paid once, but Store items and subscriptions can add up if purchases are left open.
Minecraft App Store Cost With Optional Add-Ons
A cleaner way to price Minecraft is to split the cost into “must pay” and “may pay.” The must-pay part is the app download. The may-pay part depends on how you play, who you play with, and whether cosmetic content matters to you.
| Cost Area | What You Pay | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Base App | $6.99 in the U.S. | One-time App Store purchase for Minecraft on iPhone and iPad. |
| Sales Tax | Varies by location | Apple may add tax at checkout, so the final total can be higher than the sticker price. |
| iPhone And iPad Use | Account download | Use the Apple account that bought the app when adding it to another compatible mobile device. |
| Realms: 2 Friends | $3.99 per month shown in-app | A smaller private hosted world for you and two friends at the same time. |
| Realms Plus: 10 Friends | $7.99 per month shown in-app | A larger private hosted world with rotating Marketplace content. |
| Minecraft Store Items | $1.99 to $9.99 shown on Apple | Optional packs and items bought inside the game. |
| Minecoins | Pack prices vary | Digital currency used for many Marketplace purchases. |
| Controller Play | No separate app fee | The App Store listing marks controller play as allowed, but the controller itself is a separate purchase if you want one. |
That table shows why two players can pay different totals for the same app. A solo builder may pay only $6.99. A family running a private Realm for several kids may pay a monthly fee after the app purchase.
Minecoins And Marketplace Spending
Minecoins are Minecraft’s digital currency for Marketplace content on Bedrock. Mojang’s Buy Minecoins page says Minecoins work with iOS along with other Bedrock platforms. They are used for many paid skins, maps, texture packs, and add-ons.
You do not need Minecoins for a normal Survival world. You might want them if your child wants a dinosaur map, a furniture add-on, or a skin pack. The safer move is to set a spending limit before browsing the Marketplace, since small packs can feel harmless until several are bought in one week.
When The Mobile Version Is Worth The Price
Minecraft on iPhone or iPad is a good buy when portability matters. Touch controls work well for casual building, mining, farming, and short play sessions. iPad players get more screen space, which makes building and inventory sorting easier than on a small phone.
The trade-off is control precision. Redstone builds, long chat commands, and large builds can feel easier on a keyboard and mouse. If you already own Minecraft on console or PC, the mobile app is still a separate App Store purchase. Buying it on iOS does not hand you the Java Edition for PC.
| Buyer Type | Better Choice | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Solo Player | Base app only | You can build, mine, and survive without a subscription. |
| Parent Buying For One Child | Base app plus purchase controls | The main risk is unplanned Store spending, not the app price. |
| Two Kids Sharing Worlds | Base app on each account or device | Each player needs access to the game for smooth multiplayer. |
| Friend Group | Realms Plus after a trial | A private world stays online when the owner is away. |
| Cosmetic Fan | Minecoin budget | Skins and texture packs are optional, but they can become a habit. |
| Small Phone User | Try controls before buying extras | The game may feel cramped during building, typing, or inventory work. |
How To Avoid Paying For The Wrong App
Search results can show add-on apps, skin editors, map apps, and education versions near the main game. The paid game you want for regular play should be from Mojang and should use the official Minecraft name and icon. Check the seller line before you tap the price button.
Also check device requirements. The App Store listing says the game requires iOS 13.0 or later for iPhone and iPadOS 13.0 or later for iPad. Older devices may fail to install the game, or they may run it poorly after new updates.
Ways To Keep The Total Low
You can keep the purchase simple by paying for the base app and waiting before buying extras. Play a few worlds first. Learn how building, crafting, mining, and multiplayer feel on your device. Then decide whether a Realm or Marketplace item is worth more money.
- Use Apple purchase approval for child accounts.
- Skip Minecoins until you know which packs you want.
- Try Realms only when friends will use it often.
- Cancel any monthly plan you no longer use.
- Check the official listing before buying, since prices can shift by region.
If you came here for one number, use $6.99 as the U.S. App Store price for the main iPhone and iPad game. If you came here to plan the real cost, count the base app first, then add only the extras you’ll use. For many players, Minecraft on the App Store stays a one-time purchase.
References & Sources
- Apple App Store.“Minecraft: Dream It, Build It!”Shows the U.S. App Store price, age rating, device details, and in-app purchase list.
- Minecraft.“Purchasing And Setting Up A New Bedrock Realm.”Explains Realm and Realms Plus options for Bedrock players.
- Minecraft.“Buy Minecoins.”Describes Minecoins and iOS compatibility for Minecraft Marketplace purchases.
