Did you know that over 7 million apps are jostling for attention across app stores right now?
It sounds like a crowded party, but the gag is that only a few get to dance in the spotlight. Year after year, the same big names dominate, while new challengers claw their way in. That’s what got me curious enough to dig deep into the most popular apps of 2025 (also because my editor thought it was a good idea).
This isn’t just a list of who’s on top. It’s about the surprising shifts happening in our digital habits. Some apps have quietly crept into the top mobile apps of 2025 rankings because of viral trends, while others are holding their crown simply because they’ve become too essential to ignore.
And the regional stories are fascinating too. An app that’s barely known in the U.S. could be the number one download across Asia or Africa.
To make this roundup meaningful, I didn’t just rely on guesswork. I pulled data from Sensor Tower, App Annie, and Statista, looking at monthly active users (MAUs), downloads, and revenue. That way, you and I can see not only who’s the most installed, but who people stick with and spend on.
What’s inside?
- The most popular apps in the world right now (and which ones are secretly bleeding users).
- Regional shocks: Why Nigeria’s top 5 looks nothing like Germany’s.
- My brutal take on overhyped apps..
So, whether you’re a creator, marketer, or just an app junkie like me, this breakdown will show you the apps running the world in 2025, and maybe make you rethink what’s on your home screen.
TLDR: Key takeaways from this article
- TikTok still reigns globally, but Temu is the breakout star in the U.S., dominating downloads for a second consecutive year.
- As you are aware, AI is now mainstream. ChatGPT landed in the top 15 on both iOS and Google Play, a first for an AI assistant app.
- WhatsApp (communication), Duolingo (education), and Flo (health/fitness) each dominate their niches.
- When it comes to user behavior, privacy, digital wellness, and subscription fatigue are shaping app adoption.
- Expect AI, health, education, and “super apps” (commerce + payments + social) to gain the most traction by 2026.
Quick glance: Top 20 most popular apps worldwide
Millions of apps compete for our attention daily, but only a handful dominate the spotlight.
And in June 2025, the fight for attention was especially fierce. According to Statista, ChatGPT and TikTok topped the list, with 50 million and 37 million downloads, respectively. Not far behind were Meta’s heavyweights, Instagram (36 million) and Facebook (30 million). Meanwhile, staples like WhatsApp, video-editing darling CapCut, and fast-rising e-commerce app Temu continued to show up strong.
Here’s a quick snapshot of the current leaderboard:
Rank | App name | Category | Downloads (June 2025) | Platform (iOS/Android) |
1 | ChatGPT | AI chatbot | 50 million | iOS and Android |
2 | TikTok | Social | 37 million | iOS and Android |
3 | Social | 36 million | iOS and Android | |
4 | Social | 30 million | iOS and Android | |
5 | Messaging | 28 million | iOS and Android | |
6 | CapCut | Video editing | 24 million | iOS and Android |
7 | Temu | Shopping | 23 million | iOS and Android |
8 | Threads | Social | 22 million | iOS and Android |
9 | Snapchat | Social | 20 million | iOS and Android |
10 | Telegram | Messaging | 19 million | iOS and Android |
While we await the end of 2025 to get the complete picture, let’s look at the full-year data for 2024. TikTok reclaimed its first place, outpacing Instagram, which had briefly stolen the position in 2023:
Here’s how the apps stack up:
App | Downloads (2024) |
TikTok | 825.48 million |
817.49 million | |
597.87 million | |
564.33 million | |
Temu | 516.4 million |
Telegram | 447.77 million |
CapCut | 410.33 million |
Snapchat | 330.55 million |
Threads | 326.75 million |
WhatsApp Business | 294.1 million |
Facebook Messenger | 289.63 million |
ChatGPT | 282.22 million |
Spotify | 244.16 million |
Shein | 228.45 million |
Roblox | 203.96 million |
Sources: Statista.
What caught my eye is how AI has officially joined the big leagues. Seeing ChatGPT lead June 2025 downloads is a signal that AI apps are going mainstream. Two years ago, AI chatbots weren’t on this list, but now people are downloading chatbots alongside TikTok and Instagram.
Another big shift is Temu’s meteoric rise. For an app that barely existed a few years ago, crossing half a billion installs in 2024 is insane. In the same year, Techpoint Africa reported that the e-commerce platform was the most downloaded Android and iOS app in Nigeria, thanks to its aggressive marketing. It demonstrates how social-commerce hybrids are transforming global shopping habits.
And then there’s CapCut. If TikTok is the stage, CapCut is the backstage crew making the magic happen. Its steady climb proves that creators want editing tools baked into their ecosystem. In 2025, it’s social + AI + shopping that are wrestling for your attention, and it has been fascinating to watch.
How I ranked the apps
Whenever I read “top apps” articles online, my first question is always “based on what?”
I want to be upfront and let you know that, for this ranking of the most popular apps in the world, I drew from multiple sources and weighed more than just flashy numbers.
Here’s how I did it:
1. Data sources
I combined reports from Statista, App Store and Google Play rankings, third-party analytics firms, and official revenue filings. That way, we’re not relying on a single platform’s leaderboard but cross-checking what’s happening worldwide.
2. Key metrics
Popularity is multi-layered. To keep things balanced, I looked at:
- Downloads. This is what I looked at primarily. I looked at both lifetime totals and recent surges, because hype matters.
- Active users. This covered both daily (DAU) and monthly (MAU). Are users sticking around after they download the apps?
- Growth rate. Which apps are gaining momentum versus those just coasting on past glory?
3. Geographic scope
I paid attention to global trends, but also regional quirks. For example, an app might barely make noise in North America but dominate in Asia or Africa. Those differences tell a bigger story about how digital culture varies across continents.
4. Time frame
While I highlighted how well these apps performed in a specific month of 2025 (as the year hasn’t ended), I relied heavily on 2024 data to determine which apps are rising, slipping, or holding steady.
5. Platform considerations
Not all apps perform the same across devices. Some thrive on Android in emerging markets, while others are iOS-first darlings. I factored in cross-platform performance to provide a more comprehensive picture.
Most popular apps in the world by category
Now, let’s take a look at the most popular apps by category.
A. Most popular social media and communication apps
If there’s one category that shapes our daily lives, it’s this one. Social media and communication apps are where culture happens. Memes are born here, trends catch fire here, and in many parts of the world, these apps have even replaced news outlets.
App | Downloads (2024) |
TikTok | 825.48 million |
817.49 million | |
597.87 million | |
564.33 million | |
Telegram | 447.77 million |
Snapchat | 330.55 million |
Threads | 326.75 million |
Facebook Messenger | 289.63 million |
183 million | |
X (Twitter) | 135 million |
TikTok led the pack with over 800 million installs, while Instagram trailed closely, proving once again that short videos and visual storytelling are defining how we connect.
1. TikTok
App name | TikTok |
Type of platform | Social/Video Sharing |
Monthly Active Users (MAU) | 1.84 billion |
Total downloads | 825.48 million |
Key markets | United States, China, Indonesia, Pakistan |
Growth trend | Up |
What makes it popular | Addictive short-form video, viral trends, creator tools, celebrity adoption, monetization opportunities |
After a nail-biting competition with Instagram in the previous year, TikTok surged ahead in 2024 with over 825 million downloads, cementing its spot as the most popular social app worldwide. Even a temporary ban scare in the U.S. early in 2025 barely dented its momentum.
Its magic lies in its simplicity: record, edit, upload, and watch your content go viral in minutes. TikTok has also become a magnet for celebrities and influencers. For many creators, TikTok is a career. That powerful mix of entertainment, fame, and revenue is why TikTok remains #1, and why it’s likely to stay there.
2. Instagram
App name | |
Type of platform | Social / Photo & Video Sharing |
Monthly Active Users (MAU) | 2.0 billion (global estimate) |
Total downloads | 817.49 million |
Key markets | United States, India, Brazil, Europe |
Growth trend | Stable (consistently strong, with potential upside if TikTok faces restrictions) |
What makes it popular | Visual storytelling, Reels, business tools, influencer culture, and constant feature innovation |
Instagram has been downloaded more than 3.8 billion times since 2010, making it one of the most successful apps of all time. And in 2024, it wasn’t far behind TikTok, pulling in 817 million downloads compared to TikTok’s 825 million. With talks of a U.S. TikTok ban still hanging in the air, Instagram could very well leapfrog into the top spot in 2026.
What’s kept Instagram relevant is its ability to reinvent itself. It started as a simple photo-sharing app with filters and hashtags, then evolved to include short videos, Stories, live streaming, and most recently, Reels. That adaptability has turned it into a home for both creators and small businesses. Its built-in e-commerce and business tools also give entrepreneurs easy access to customers without needing a standalone website.
3. Facebook
App name | |
Type of platform | Social Networking |
Monthly Active Users (MAU) | 3.07 billion |
Total downloads | 597.87 million |
Key markets | Global, especially Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America |
Growth trend | Up |
What Makes It Popular | Community, groups, family connections, content sharing, and marketplace |
After slipping in popularity for a while, Facebook made a comeback in 2024 with nearly 598 million downloads, jumping from 8th place in 2023 to 3rd. That’s no small feat for a platform that launched two decades ago. With over 3 billion active users, it remains one of the most enduring apps in history.
Its magic is connection. Whether it’s keeping up with family photos, joining interest groups, or using the marketplace to buy and sell locally, Facebook still offers a sense of belonging that few platforms can replicate.
Even with newer platforms attracting Gen Z, Facebook continues to thrive across older demographics and in emerging markets. And behind the scenes, Meta has kept the app technically solid.
4. WhatsApp
App Name | |
Type of platform | Messaging / Communication |
Monthly Active Users (MAU) | 2.0 billion |
Total downloads | 564.33 million |
Key markets | India, Brazil, Europe, Latin America, Africa |
Growth trend | Stable, it remains essential in communication-heavy markets |
What makes it popular | Free international messaging and calls, encryption, cross-platform access, group chats |
WhatsApp remains one of the most essential communication tools in the world, with over 2 billion users sending an estimated 140 billion messages every day. In 2024, it surpassed 564 million downloads, demonstrating that even after years at the top, it continues to grow steadily.
What set WhatsApp apart early on, and still makes it essential, is free international calling and messaging. Long before Zoom and Slack entered the scene, WhatsApp was already breaking down borders by allowing people to chat across countries without incurring expensive telecom fees. That core feature is still its biggest selling point.
Security is another major factor. With end-to-end encryption and two-step verification, WhatsApp appeals to privacy-conscious users as much as it does to everyday texters. Add in cross-platform support (including a desktop app) and document sharing, and it’s easy to see why WhatsApp continues to dominate messaging globally.
5. Telegram
App Name | Telegram |
Platform type | Social/Communication |
Monthly Active Users | 950 million |
Total downloads | 447.77 million |
Key markets | India, Russia, Brazil, the Middle East |
Growth trend | Up |
What Makes It Popular | Privacy-first stance, large group chats, and rich media/file-sharing |
Telegram is a cloud-based instant messaging service that offers sophisticated encryption features and multi-device syncing, distinguishing it from WhatsApp and Messenger. Its hallmark is flexibility. Users can share files up to 2GB, create channels for mass broadcasting, and enjoy optional end-to-end encrypted “Secret Chats.”
In some regions, particularly Russia, Brazil, and parts of the Middle East, Telegram has overtaken traditional social apps thanks to its reputation for privacy and freedom of expression. Its group-chat capacity (up to 200,000 members) makes it ideal for communities, businesses, and even political movements.
6. Snapchat
App name | Snapchat |
Platform type | Multimedia Messaging |
Monthly Active Users | 850 million |
Total downloads | 330.55 million |
Key markets | North America, Europe, India |
Growth trend | Stable with a slight upward trend |
What makes it popular | Temporary messaging and AR filters |
Snapchat remains one of the most innovative players in social media, defining an entire generation’s communication style with its ephemeral messaging and story format. While many platforms later copied Stories, Snapchat retained its edge through fun, immersive AR lenses and a highly engaged Gen Z user base.
The app was born mobile-first and designed around intimacy. Messages disappear, stories fade, and privacy feels more natural. Beyond entertainment, Snapchat has built a thriving ecosystem for creators and advertisers, with features like Spotlight (its TikTok-style video feed) and Snap Map for location-based sharing.
7. Threads
App name | Threads |
Platform type | Social Media / Microblogging |
Monthly Active Users | 400 million |
Total downloads | 326.75 million |
Key markets | United States, India, UK, Brazil |
Growth trend | Up, though slower after explosive launch |
What makes it popular | Seamless Instagram integration + real-time conversations |
Threads, Meta’s text-focused app spun out of Instagram, was released in July 2023 and quickly smashed records with 100 million downloads in just one week. Its tight coupling with Instagram meant users could carry over their handles, verification, and followers seamlessly, lowering the friction of adoption.
By 2025, Threads has carved a solid niche as a real-time conversation hub, often touted as Meta’s answer to X (formerly Twitter). It appeals to creators, journalists, and communities who crave short-form updates without the chaos of older platforms.
While its momentum slowed after the initial surge, its continuous updates, like trending topics, better search, and cross-posting, suggest Meta is playing the long game to keep Threads climbing the ranks.
8. Facebook Messenger
App name | Messenger |
Platform type | Social Media & Communication |
Monthly Active Users | 947 million |
Total downloads | 289.63 million |
Key markets | United States, India, Philippines, Europe |
Growth trend | Stable |
What makes it popular | Seamless integration with Facebook, instant messaging, and video calls |
Messenger remains a global leader in messaging apps, largely due to its tight integration with Facebook. Although WhatsApp has stolen much of the global spotlight for international communication, Messenger thrives in the U.S. and parts of Southeast Asia. Its ease of use, emoji reactions, sticker packs, and smooth group chat functionality keep users engaged.
In recent years, Messenger has expanded into video conferencing, payments, and business chat, which positions it as more than just a casual texting app. Meta has also leveraged Messenger as a key platform for automating customer service through chatbots.
9. Pinterest
App name | |
Platform type | Social, Lifestyle & Inspiration |
Monthly Active Users (MAU) | 537 million |
Total downloads | 183 million |
Key markets | U.S., Brazil, Germany, India |
Growth trend | Stable to Upward (3.2% YoY growth) |
What makes it popular | Visual inspiration for design, fashion, food, and lifestyle |
Pinterest stands out as the go-to app for visual discovery and inspiration. From recipes and home décor to wedding planning and travel ideas, users flock to Pinterest to explore and save visual “pins” to customizable boards. Unlike Instagram or TikTok, Pinterest is less about social sharing and more about personal inspiration and future planning.
The platform has also leaned heavily into e-commerce integration with shoppable pins and personalized recommendations powered by AI. With a loyal base of lifestyle creators and planners, Pinterest continues to thrive as a hybrid between a search engine and a social app. For businesses, it offers targeted ad tools that capitalize on user intent, making it a powerful platform for brand discovery.
10. X (Twitter)
App name | X (formerly Twitter) |
Platform type | Microblogging & News |
Monthly Active Users (MAU) | 586 million |
Total downloads | 135 million |
Key markets | U.S., Japan, Brazil, India |
Growth trend | Slightly Downward (-2.5% YoY) |
What makes it popular | Real-time news, live commentary, trending discussions |
Despite controversies and brand changes, X remains one of the most influential apps in the world. The platform thrives on real-time conversations, from breaking news and politics to sports and pop culture. Its trending topics feature still drives global discourse, making X a vital tool for journalists, activists, and opinion leaders.
The Elon Musk-era rebrand from Twitter to X has been polarizing, but the platform continues to attract heavy daily engagement. While growth has slowed in certain regions, X has diversified its offerings through subscriptions (X Premium), monetization for creators, and the integration of long-form content.
B. Most popular video and streaming apps
Whether it’s binge-watching a Netflix series, scrolling endlessly through YouTube rabbit holes, or handing a tablet to kids with YouTube Kids safely loaded, these apps have gone from entertainment platforms to becoming digital stages, classrooms, and comfort zones.
Here’s how the biggest names are shaping how you and billions of others watch, learn, and relax.
1. Netflix
App name | Netflix |
Type of platform | Video streaming (on-demand + originals) |
Downloads | 161 million |
Key markets | United States, Europe, India, Latin America |
Growth trend | Stable |
What makes it popular | Original series/movies, global distribution, binge-friendly model, cross-device viewing |
Netflix practically invented the binge-watching era. With a library that spans international originals, licensed classics, and a growing catalog of award-winning films, the platform has woven itself into daily routines worldwide. Even with stiff competition from Disney+, Prime Video, and others, Netflix holds its ground thanks to its brand identity and constant global expansion.
What makes Netflix sticky is its knack for producing cultural moments, like Squid Game, Wednesday, or Money Heist. These became internet events that ripple across TikTok, memes, and conversations. Add in personalized recommendations, offline downloads, and a user-friendly interface, and you get a streaming service that feels impossible to quit.
2. YouTube
App name | YouTube |
Type of platform | Video Sharing & Streaming |
Downloads | 145 million |
Key markets | Global, dominant everywhere with internet access |
Growth trend | Up |
What makes it popular | User-generated content, monetization for creators, endless niches, and live streaming |
YouTube is a global town square. With over 2.4 billion active users, it’s the world’s second-most visited site after Google. Its strength lies in its versatility: tutorials, entertainment, live streams, music, and even full-length movies coexist in one app. For many, YouTube is both a TV replacement and a classroom.
Its pre-installation on Android phones helps inflate its download numbers, but its true power is cultural. For creators, it’s still the biggest platform for building careers. The ability to monetize content through ads, memberships, and sponsorships keeps the ecosystem thriving.
3. YouTube Kids
App name | YouTube Kids |
Type of platform | Child-Friendly video streaming |
Downloads | 138 million |
Key markets | United States, Europe, India, Southeast Asia |
Growth trend | Up |
What makes it popular | Curated, safe content for children, parental controls, and ad filtering |
YouTube Kids was Google’s answer to one of YouTube’s biggest challenges, which was entertaining younger viewers. With strict content curation, parental controls, and family-friendly videos, the app provides children with a streaming experience that is both enjoyable and reassuring for parents. Its popularity has grown alongside the boom in tablet use for kids’ entertainment.
While it lacks the unfiltered variety of YouTube, that’s the point. Parents can limit screen time, filter categories, and ensure kids don’t stumble into viral rabbit holes. For families, it’s a compromise between letting kids enjoy the internet and keeping them safe.
4. JioCinema
App name | JioCinema |
Type of platform | Video streaming (on-demand + sports) |
Downloads | 117 million |
Key markets | India |
Growth trend | Up |
What makes it popular | Free access bundled with Jio telecom plans, live sports (IPL), and Bollywood content |
Thanks to Reliance Jio’s massive telecom base, the app rides on free or bundled access, giving it an instant edge in one of the fastest-growing mobile markets in the world. What fueled its rise was streaming the Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket matches. In addition to cricket, JioCinema houses Bollywood movies, regional films, and international series, making it a one-stop shop for entertainment.
5. Amazon Prime Video
App name | Amazon Prime Video |
Type of platform | Video Streaming (Subscription) |
Downloads | 113 million |
Key markets | United States, Europe, India, Latin America |
Growth trend | Stable |
What makes it popular | Bundled with Amazon Prime, exclusive originals, and global reach |
Amazon Prime Video owes much of its success to Amazon’s ecosystem play. By bundling it with Prime’s shipping and shopping perks, millions of subscribers automatically get access, whether they planned on a streaming service or not. That clever strategy makes Prime Video one of the default global competitors to Netflix.
Its content mix is wide, including Hollywood blockbusters, regional cinema, and exclusive Amazon Originals (The Boys, Reacher, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel). Its growing investment in sports rights (like NFL Thursday Night Football) also helps broaden its audience.
6. Max (formerly HBO Max)
App name | Max |
Type of platform | Video Streaming (Premium Subscription) |
Downloads | 97 million |
Key markets | United States, Latin America, parts of Europe |
Growth trend | Stable (slight dip after HBO rebrand, now recovering) |
What makes it popular | HBO originals (Succession, Game of Thrones), Warner Bros. library, strong adult content |
Max, the rebranded HBO Max, is still carving its identity post-name change, but its catalog speaks for itself. With HBO originals, Warner Bros. movies, DC content, and even lifestyle programming, it offers a premium, grown-up streaming feel. The app competes less on volume and more on prestige — if Netflix is for bingeing, Max is for the shows you discuss at dinner parties.
The transition to “Max” confused some longtime users, but the platform is slowly regaining traction, especially with blockbuster series releases. It doesn’t dominate globally yet, but in markets like the U.S., it remains a heavyweight.
7. DramaBox
App name | DramaBox |
Type of platform | Video Streaming (Drama-focused) |
Downloads | 94 million |
Key markets | Southeast Asia, East Asia, Middle East |
Growth trend | Up (+15% YoY, fueled by K-drama wave) |
What makes it popular | Korean, Chinese, Japanese dramas; free access with ads; niche audience appeal |
DramaBox rides the Hallyu (Korean Wave) and wider Asian drama boom. Its focus on serialized content, from K-dramas to Chinese period pieces, gives it a passionate, loyal audience. For millions of users, it’s the easiest way to catch the latest trending dramas without needing multiple subscriptions.
The app’s ad-supported model makes it accessible, while premium tiers remove interruptions. With K-dramas and Asian storytelling continuing to trend globally, DramaBox is positioned as a niche player that’s quietly becoming mainstream in its target regions.
8. Disney
App name | Disney+ |
Type of platform | Video Streaming |
Downloads | 84 million |
Key markets | United States, Europe, India, Southeast Asia |
Growth trend | Stable |
What makes it popular | Disney classics, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, National Geographic |
Disney+ entered the streaming scene in 2019 and immediately shook the industry. With a content library stacked with generational IP, including Marvel, Star Wars, Frozen, and The Lion King. Families flocked to it for kids’ content, while adults binged Marvel and The Mandalorian. Although growth has plateaued recently, Disney+ remains a powerhouse, particularly in households where parents seek a safe and family-friendly streaming option.
9. ShortMax
App name | ShortMax |
Type of platform | Short-form Video Streaming |
Total Downloads | 83 million |
Key Markets | Southeast Asia, India, the Middle East |
Growth Trend | Up |
What Makes It Popular | Bite-sized entertainment, regional content, affordable access |
ShortMax is part of the new wave of short-form entertainment apps, sitting somewhere between TikTok and Netflix. Instead of long shows, it specializes in snackable dramas, comedy skits, and episodic content built for fast consumption. This formula resonates with mobile-first audiences in Asia, where people often stream on the go with limited data.
Its popularity comes from low barriers to entry: ad-supported, cheap premium tiers, and a focus on regional languages. It’s not globally dominant yet, but in markets like India and Southeast Asia, ShortMax is carving out a serious user base.
10. Hotstar
App name | Hotstar (Disney+ Hotstar in India) |
Type of platform | Video Streaming |
Downloads | 73 million |
Key markets | India, Southeast Asia, the Middle East |
Growth trend | Mixed |
What makes it popular | Regional movies, TV shows, live cricket, and Disney’s partnership in India |
Hotstar used to be the undisputed king of streaming in India, largely thanks to its cricket broadcasting rights. When Disney acquired it, the platform merged into Disney+ Hotstar, gaining access to Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars, alongside its bread-and-butter Bollywood and regional content.
The loss of IPL rights in 2023 hit its numbers hard, but Hotstar still thrives on local TV shows, movies, and cricket coverage outside the IPL. Its dual model (ad-supported free tier + premium subscription) makes it accessible to millions across India and beyond.
C. Most popular music and audio apps
For billions of people, music is the rhythm that powers daily life. From global giants like Spotify to niche karaoke platforms like StarMaker, these apps have created entirely new ways for people to listen, sing, and discover sound.
Here’s how the top five stack up:
1. Spotify
App name | Spotify |
Type of platform | Music Streaming (Subscription + Ad-supported) |
Downloads | 244 million |
Key markets | Europe, North America, Latin America, Southeast Asia |
Growth trend | Up |
What makes it popular | Personalized playlists, massive library, podcasts, cross-device syncing |
Spotify is the undisputed heavyweight champion of music streaming. With its uncanny ability to recommend the perfect playlist for every mood, it feels less like an app and more like that friend who always knows what song to play. Beyond music, Spotify has become a podcast hub, investing heavily in exclusive shows and making audio its empire.
Its global reach, generous free tier, and seamless device syncing keep it ahead of rivals. For many, Spotify isn’t just where they stream music — it’s where they live.
2. DDMusic
App name | DDMusic |
Type of platform | Music & Audio Streaming |
Total downloads | 85 million |
Key markets | China, Southeast Asia |
Growth trend | Up (+9% YoY) |
What makes it popular | Huge localized catalog, karaoke features, regional licensing deals |
DDMusic is a regional powerhouse, particularly in Asia, where it thrives due to its extensive catalog of local artists and strategic licensing deals. Unlike Western-first platforms, it’s designed for users who want local language hits front and center, and it delivers. Karaoke features, social sharing, and artist-fan interactions give DDMusic a sense of community. It may not be a household name globally, but in its core markets, it’s a cultural staple.
3. StarMaker
App name | StarMaker |
Type of platform | Karaoke & Social Singing |
Downloads | 79 million |
Key markets | India, Southeast Asia, the Middle East |
Growth trend | Up |
What makes it popular | Karaoke duets, recording features, social sharing |
StarMaker is the karaoke machine. The app lets users record, remix, and share their singing performances, often in duet mode with friends or even strangers. It’s equal parts entertainment and social platform. Its popularity exploded in markets where karaoke culture is already deeply ingrained, and it benefits from viral sharing on social media.
4. YouTube Music
App Name | YouTube Music |
Type of Platform | Music Streaming (Subscription + Free tier) |
Downloads | 65 million |
Key Markets | Global, with strong adoption in the U.S. and India |
Growth Trend | Stable |
What makes it popular | Seamless YouTube integration, massive video library, background play |
YouTube Music may be late to the music streaming scene, but it arrived with a VIP badge. Leveraging YouTube’s unmatched video library, the app offers a seamless way to switch between official tracks, covers, remixes, and live performances. Its edge lies in integration: users can discover a song on regular YouTube and immediately stream it on YouTube Music, with personalized playlists catching up to Spotify’s in quality.
5. Shazam
App name | Shazam |
Type of platform | Music Discovery (Song Recognition) |
Downloads | 53 million |
Key markets | Global |
Growth trend | Stable |
What makes it popular | Instant music recognition, Apple ecosystem integration |
With a single tap, Shazam listens to the music around you and tells you the song in seconds. It has become the ultimate music discovery tool. Since Apple acquired Shazam, the app has been tightly woven into iOS, making it a default for iPhone users. Even if it’s not an everyday app like Spotify, Shazam holds its niche, solving the age-old problem of “What song is this?” in under 10 seconds.
Here’s a summary of the top 10 music and audio apps:
App | Downloads (millions) |
Spotify | 239 |
DDMusic | 85 |
StarMaker | 79 |
YouTube Music | 65 |
Shazam | 53 |
Lark Player | 50 |
Wynk Music | 47 |
JioSaavn | 46 |
SoundCloud | 38 |
Douyin Music | 30 |
D. Most popular business, productivity, and utility apps
From editing TikTok clips in CapCut to logging into accounts securely with Microsoft Authenticator, these are the digital workhorses of the modern world.
1. Capcut
App name | CapCut |
Type of platform | Video Editing |
Downloads | 410 million |
Key markets | United States, India, Southeast Asia |
Growth trend | Up (strong demand from creators and businesses) |
What makes it popular | Free, intuitive editing tools, integrated with TikTok, trending templates |
CapCut is easily the most popular mobile video editing app in 2025. Initially launched in April 2020, it gained significant momentum with over 250 million downloads in its first year, and it hasn’t slowed down since. Today, it’s the go-to editor for everyone from TikTok teens to small businesses creating polished reels.
What makes CapCut click is its accessibility. Unlike traditional editing software that comes with a steep learning curve, CapCut hands users ready-made templates, filters, effects, and even copyright-free music. Reverse a clip, change the speed, auto-caption a dialogue, it’s all a few taps away. Add its seamless integration with TikTok and Instagram Reels, and you’ve got a powerhouse that fuels the short-form video revolution.
2. WhatsApp Business
App name | WhatsApp Business |
Type of platform | Messaging / Business Communication |
Downloads | 294.1 million |
Key markets | India, Brazil, Africa, Southeast Asia |
Growth trend | Up (driven by small business adoption) |
What makes it popular | Free, integrates with WhatsApp, catalog & messaging tools for SMEs |
For many small businesses, WhatsApp is the Internet. WhatsApp Business builds on that reality, giving shop owners and service providers an easy way to reach customers directly where they already are. Sellers can create product catalogs, set automated greetings, organize chats, and even integrate payments.
Instead of setting up websites or complicated CRM systems, a boutique clothing shop in Lagos or a café in São Paulo can run their customer communication entirely through WhatsApp Business.
3. ChatGPT
App Name | ChatGPT |
Type of platform | AI Assistant / Productivity |
Downloads | 282 million |
Key markets | United States, Europe, India, Latin America |
Growth trend | Up (+ strong adoption across education & enterprise) |
What makes it popular | Natural conversations, AI-powered assistance, plugins, voice + multimodal features |
ChatGPT’s 2022 launch reshaped productivity apps forever. What started as a clever chatbot quickly evolved into a multipurpose assistant, drafting emails, tutoring students, debugging code, brainstorming marketing copy, and even engaging in real-time conversations. By 2024, OpenAI had equipped ChatGPT with plugins, voice features, and industry modules tailored for classrooms, clinics, and boardrooms.
4. Zoom
App name | Zoom |
Type of platform | Video Conferencing |
Downloads | 137 million |
Key markets | Global (U.S., Asia, Europe) |
Growth trend | Stable (post-pandemic normalization) |
What makes it popular | Reliable group calls, integrations (Salesforce, Slack), free tier |
Zoom went from an obscure enterprise tool to a household name almost overnight during the pandemic. But while its meteoric rise in 2020 was fueled by necessity, Zoom has managed to sustain relevance by evolving.
Today, Zoom is less of a novelty and more of an infrastructure tool. Universities, remote companies, and global conferences still rely on it daily. Though growth has plateaued, Zoom remains an indispensable name in digital communication.
5. Microsoft Teams
App name | Microsoft Teams |
Type of platform | Business Communication / Collaboration |
Downloads | 103 million |
Key Markets | United States, Europe, India |
Growth Trend | Stable (maintained dominance in enterprise use) |
What Makes It Popular | Seamless Office 365 integration, hybrid work adoption, and enterprise features |
Microsoft Teams has carved out its role as the beating heart of workplace communication, especially for organizations already entrenched in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem. With features like real-time chat, video conferencing, and file sharing directly tied into Office tools like Word, Excel, and Outlook, Teams is a natural fit for hybrid and remote workforces.
Instead of piecing together multiple platforms, Teams bundles them into one. For businesses with thousands of employees, that simplicity is invaluable.
Here’s a summary of the top 10 business apps.
App | Downloads (millions) |
Capcut | 410 |
ChatGPT | 282 |
WhatsApp Business | 294.1 |
Zoom | 137 |
Microsoft Teams | 103 |
Microsoft Authenticator | 75 |
73 | |
Google Meet | 68 |
Adobe Acrobat Reader | 62 |
Indeed | 58 |
DigiLocker | 39 |
TikTok Shop Seller Center | 20 |
E. Most popular gaming apps
Gaming apps are cultural movements, billion-dollar industries, and in some cases, the very apps that keep app stores alive.
1. Roblox (205 million downloads)
Roblox is essentially a universe. By allowing players to create their games and experiences, Roblox has built an empire of user-generated content that appeals to kids, teens, and even adults. Its in-game economy, powered by Robux, keeps players engaged while offering real earning opportunities for creators. With millions of games inside one app and constant updates, Roblox feels less like a single title and more like a gaming platform of its own.
2. Subway Surfers (203 million downloads)
Few games have aged as gracefully as Subway Surfers. First released in 2012, this endless runner still commands hundreds of millions of monthly players. The formula is simple: dodge trains, collect coins, chase high scores. It’s the kind of game you can pick up for 30 seconds or 30 minutes, and that’s why it’s stuck around as one of the most downloaded mobile games of all time.
3. Block Blast (198 million downloads)
Block Blast has quickly climbed the charts thanks to its easy-to-learn mechanics and satisfying puzzle loops. Like Tetris for the mobile era, it keeps players hooked with increasingly tricky levels that balance challenge with reward. Its casual nature makes it perfect for a wide audience, from kids looking for a quick game to adults squeezing in a mental break during the day.
4. Pizza Ready (169 million downloads)
Pizza Ready taps into the universal love of food by letting players run their pizzeria. With tasks ranging from topping pizzas to managing orders, it mixes time-management gameplay with lighthearted simulation fun. It’s part of the growing wave of cooking and simulation games that thrive on quick sessions and satisfying progress loops.
5. Ludo King (157 million downloads)
Ludo King modernized a board game classic and made it mobile-friendly for the digital age. Its biggest strength is multiplayer; friends and families scattered across geographies can still roll dice and chase each other around the board in real time. Its simplicity, combined with cultural nostalgia in markets like India, has made it one of the most played games of the decade.
Here are the top 10 gaming apps:
Game | Downloads (millions) |
Roblox | 205 |
Subway Surfers | 203 |
Block Blast | 198 |
Pizza Ready | 169 |
Ludo King | 157 |
Free Fire | 146 |
Free Fire Max | 135 |
Offline Games – JindoBlu | 118 |
8 Ball Pool | 114 |
My Talking Tom 2 | 114 |
Royal Match | 112 |
Candy Crush Saga | 109 |
Build a Queen | 101 |
PUBG Mobile | 96 |
Brawl Stars | 92 |
F. Most popular shopping and eCommerce apps
Shopping apps have evolved beyond being mere digital malls; they’re where discovery meets deals, and convenience meets culture. Here are the top-performing apps globally:
App | Platform type | Downloads (millions) |
Temu | Online marketplace | 516M |
Shein | Fashion & lifestyle | 228M |
Meesho | Social commerce & reseller marketplace | 188M |
Amazon | eCommerce & marketplace | 150M |
Flipkart | eCommerce (India) | 138M |
Shopee | eCommerce & Marketplace | 133M |
Mercado Libre | eCommerce (Latin America) | 95M |
Alibaba | Wholesale & B2B Marketplace | 90M |
AliExpress | Cross-border eCommerce | 88M |
Shopsy | Social Commerce (India) | 80M |
G. Most popular travel apps
Travel apps have become essential for navigating cities, booking rides, and planning trips. These are the most downloaded travel apps worldwide:
App | Platform type | Downloads (millions) |
Google Maps | Navigation & Maps | 120M |
Uber | Ride-hailing &mobility | 115M |
Where is My Train | Train tracking (India) | 72M |
Airbnb | Vacation rentals & stays | 70M |
Waze | Community-based navigation | 63M |
Booking.com | Hotel & travel booking | 60M |
Grab | Ride-hailing & super app (SEA) | 50M |
Meituan | Travel & lifestyle services (China) | 44M |
Bolt | Ride-hailing & micromobility | 35M |
Trip.com | Global travel booking | 30M |
H. Most popular health and fitness apps
From tracking periods and workouts to counting steps and motivating healthier lifestyles, these are the top health and fitness apps people downloaded the most:
App | Platform type | Downloads (millions) |
Flo | Health & wellness (Period tracker) | 53M |
Sweatcoin | Fitness & rewards (Step counter) | 38M |
Health Tracker – Appsky | General health monitoring | 35M |
FitPro | Fitness & activity tracker | 33M |
Mi Fitness | Wearable companion/fitness app | 32M |
Home Workout – No Equipment | Workout & training | 31M |
Da Fit | Wearable companion/fitness app | 30M |
Strava | Running & cycling tracker | 29M |
Step Counter | Pedometer/step tracking | 22M |
Hryfine | Wearable companion/fitness app | 20M |
I. Most popular finance and banking apps
From mobile wallets and money transfers to digital banks, these apps are driving how people manage, send, and save their money worldwide:
App | Platform type | Downloads (millions) |
PhonePe | Digital payments/UPI wallet | 150M |
Google Wallet | Mobile wallet/contactless pay | 89M |
PayPal | Online payments/money transfer | 68M |
Airtel Thanks | Telecom wallet & bill payments | 68M |
NuBank | Digital bank | 54M |
AliPay | Mobile payments & lifestyle | 52M |
Paytm | Digital payments/wallet | 50M |
Cash App | P2P payments & banking | 25M |
Remitly | International money transfers | 18M |
Wise | Cross-border money transfers | 18M |
J. Most popular education apps
From language learning to problem-solving and even playful early learning, these education apps are helping millions of people pick up new skills, stay sharp, and make studying less of a chore:
App | Platform type | Downloads (millions) |
Duolingo | Language learning | 175M |
Seekho | Career & upskilling platform | 50M |
Gauth | Homework help & study solutions | 42M |
Brainly | Student Q&A & learning community | 38M |
Piano Kids | Music learning for kids | 38M |
Google Classroom | Online classroom & assignments | 36M |
Photomath | Math problem solver | 33M |
Baby Panda’s School Bus | Early learning/kids’ education | 29M |
Impulse | Brain training & memory games | 27M |
Minecraft Education | Game-based learning | 22M |
Most popular apps by platform
When you split app rankings by platform, some clear trends jump out. Social media, shopping, and utility apps dominate both the Apple App Store and Google Play.
iOS top 15 apps:
App | Downloads (millions) |
TikTok | 186 |
Temu | 138 |
Threads | 133 |
ChatGPT | 117 |
112 | |
Google Maps | 107 |
104 | |
YouTube | 103 |
CapCut | 99 |
96 | |
Gmail | 88 |
Google Chrome | 84 |
Telegram | 83 |
80 |
Google Play top 15 apps:
App | Downloads (millions) |
657 | |
TikTok | 587 |
492 | |
430 | |
Telegram | 327 |
Temu | 301 |
CapCut | 263 |
Snapchat | 248 |
WhatsApp Business | 241 |
Messenger | 215 |
Threads | 190 |
Spotify | 172 |
ChatGPT | 162 |
Meesho | 159 |
Truecaller | 146 |
Most popular apps of previous years (2023, 2022, 2021, 2020)
Most popular apps worldwide in 2023
Threads took the crown in 2023, becoming the most downloaded app in the US with nearly 193 million installs.
Here’s a snapshot:
App | Downloads |
Threads | 192.7 million |
Temu | 113 million |
TikTok | 80.9 million |
CapCut | 69.3 million |
SHEIN | 68.4 million |
WhatsApp Messenger | 68.2 million |
67.3 million | |
MONOPOLY GO! | 57.5 million |
Cash App | 55.7 million |
Snapchat | 52 million |
Source: Apptopia.
Most popular apps worldwide in 2022
TikTok maintained its dominance in 2022 with 672 million downloads across iOS and Android.
Here’s how apps performed in 2022:
App | Downloads |
TikTok | 672 million |
548 million | |
424 million | |
CapCut | 357 million |
Snapchat | 330 million |
Telegram | 310 million |
Subway Surfers | 304 million |
298 million | |
Stumble Guys | 254 million |
Spotify | 238 million |
Source: Apptopia.
Most popular apps worldwide in 2021
TikTok continued leading the charts in 2021 with more than 650 million downloads.
App | Downloads |
TikTok | 656 million |
545 million | |
416 million | |
395 million | |
Telegram | 329 million |
Snapchat | 327 million |
Zoom | 300 million |
Messenger | 268 million |
CapCut | 255 million |
Spotify | 203 million |
Source: Apptopia.
Most popular apps worldwide in 2020
In 2020, TikTok was unstoppable, racking up an incredible 850 million downloads worldwide.
App | Downloads |
TikTok | 850 million |
600 million | |
540 million | |
503 million | |
Zoom | 477 million |
Messenger | 404 million |
Snapchat | 281 million |
Telegram | 256 million |
Google Meet | 254 million |
Netflix | 223 million |
Source: Forbes.
Regional differences
North America
In both the United States and Canada, Temu was the most downloaded app. The U.S. had Temu leading with 64 million installs, followed by TikTok (53 million) and Threads (44 million). Interestingly, AI app ChatGPT held its ground alongside social giants like Instagram and WhatsApp. Canada mirrored this trend, but with a twist, as Amazon Prime Video sneaked into its top 10, making it the only country in the region where a streaming app appeared so prominently.
Europe
Across Europe, Temu was the undisputed leader, topping charts in the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and even Australia (which shares similar app habits). ChatGPT consistently ranked second or third, cementing AI as a mainstream utility. Still, each country had its local flavors: Germany saw Check24, Spain had government login app Cl@ve and tax app Hacoo, while the UK’s Tesco app made the cut. Even in countries dominated by global giants, national uniqueness was noted.
Asia
Asia presented the most fragmented landscape.
- In China, homegrown superapps (WeChat, Alipay, Taobao, Pinduoduo) dominate with user bases in the hundreds of millions, dwarfing Western apps.
- India leaned social, with Instagram crushing the competition at 341 million installs, while ecommerce (Meesho, Flipkart) and fintech (PhonePe) made strong appearances.
- Japan bucked the Temu trend, keeping TikTok on top, while niche retail (Matsukiyo Cocokara) and streaming (TVer) broke into the top 10.
- South Korea mixed global and local, with Temu on top, but two government apps (Mobile Health Insurance Card, Mobile ID App) surprisingly ranking high.
- In Indonesia, TikTok was the clear winner, but it also showed a strong preference for payments (DANA, GoPay, ShopeePay).
- Turkey stood out with its local eCommerce giant, Trendyol, holding its own against Temu, even if it was edged out overall.
Africa
Data coverage is thinner, but patterns resemble India’s blend of social and e-commerce. In markets like Nigeria and South Africa, WhatsApp, Instagram, and TikTok are the most widely used platforms, while e-commerce players such as Jumia and Takealot are regional contenders. Given the rapid uptake of fintech apps, it’s likely Africa’s top 10 charts in 2025 will look more like India’s mix of payments, ecommerce, and socials than Europe’s or North America’s.
Surprising trends
Rising stars
AI apps (ChatGPT especially) are cracking the top five in most European countries, and even hit the top three in Germany, France, and Italy. Also, hyper-niche fitness and health trackers (like Sweatcoin and Flo) keep climbing.
Declining apps
Facebook remains strong in India and Brazil, but among Gen Z markets in Europe and North America, it’s sliding out of relevance. Younger users are doubling down on TikTok, Instagram, and messaging-first ecosystems.
Regional oddities
- In Brazil, the government services app gov.br was downloaded as much as TikTok.
- In Spain, tax and login apps (Cl@ve, Hacoo) sit alongside TikTok and Temu.
- In South Korea, the Mobile Health Insurance Card app outranks ChatGPT, Instagram, and TikTok.
- In Turkey, Trendyolmilla (a fashion offshoot of Trendyol) sits above WhatsApp and Telegram.
- And in Japan, the drugstore app, Matsukiyo Cocokara, quietly outpaced WhatsApp and Facebook.
No universal popular app worldwide
If there’s one takeaway, it’s that there’s no single “most popular app in the world.” Instead, the global app ecosystem is split into three major universes:
- China’s self-contained superapp economy, where Western apps don’t stand a chance.
- India’s social + eCommerce surge, where Instagram leads but fintech and local platforms thrive.
- The West’s social-first, AI-emerging space, where Temu and ChatGPT are the breakout stars.
Put simply, we are living in a time when AI is becoming mainstream, e-commerce is going hyper-local, and government apps are starting to matter. The apps topping downloads tell us less about global uniformity and more about how tech adapts to local needs.
Future predictions
The “most popular apps in the world” are winning because they ride relevant waves: AI, policy shifts, and how you and I live on our phones.
Here’s where those waves are heading next, and how I expect the rankings to bend in 2025–2026.
Emerging technologies
- AI integration: Increasingly, AI will reside within our apps. Cameras that retouch intelligently, inboxes that assess themselves, editors that auto-cut videos for Reels/Shorts, and chatbots that understand screens, voice, and images in one go. Apps that incorporate useful AI will jump.
- AR/VR adoption. I’m talking everyday utility: AR try-ons in shopping, room planning in travel or housing, language overlays in education, and navigation arrows in maps. Expect retailers (Temu, Shein, Amazon) and travel (Booking, Airbnb, Google Maps) to push AR because it converts.
- Blockchain & Web3. The winners will solve cross-border money and identity. Remittance apps (Wise, Remitly), fintech companies in LATAM (Nubank) and India (PhonePe, Paytm), and gaming with provable asset ownership will remain at the forefront, especially where fees are prohibitive.
- IoT integration: Expect utilities (authenticator, password, wallet, maps) to seamlessly communicate with your car, lock, and lights. The more it just works, the more it sticks.
Platform evolution
- App store policy shifts: Privacy rules (ATT, Privacy Sandbox) reward apps with strong first-party engagement and direct relationships (WhatsApp, Telegram, Spotify). EU-style store changes and alt distribution will matter for utilities and pro tools more than mass social.
- Super-app gravity vs. unbundling: In Asia, super apps (Grab, Meituan) continue to pack rides, food, payments, and tickets. In the West, “soft super-apps” form via tight integration: Instagram, Threads, and Shops; WhatsApp and Business/Payments, Google’s YouTube, Music, and Shorts. Apps that feel like suites without feeling bloated will win.
User behavior shifts
- Privacy consciousness: Messaging with end-to-end encryption (WhatsApp, Telegram) keeps rising. Browsers, authenticators, and passwordless login methods (such as Microsoft Authenticator and Google Wallet) are used more frequently daily. Apps that collect less, explain more, and offer local processing earn trust and retention.
- Subscription fatigue: Expect smarter bundles (music+cloud+security), ad-supported tiers, annual passes, and usage-based pricing. Creators will blend subs with micro-purchases (templates, filters, premium replies). If you force three subscriptions for one task, you’ll leak users.
- Content consumption: Short continues to dominate discovery (TikTok/Reels/Shorts), but long-form sticks once trust is earned (YouTube proper, podcasts on Spotify/YouTube Music, premium shows on Netflix/Max). Smart apps will bridge both.
Key takeaways for different audiences
For app developers
- Market opportunities: There’s still plenty of room in underserved niches, such as health tracking, education gamification, and region-specific commerce apps. Developers who localize effectively often reap significant benefits.
- Platform strategy: With iOS dominating in North America and Google Play leading in emerging markets such as India and Africa, development priorities should align with the target audience’s geographic location. Just do both.
- Feature trends: Features like AI integration (personalization, assistants), frictionless payments, and built-in communities drive adoption and retention.
- Monetization insights: The freemium plus subscription model is the winning formula. Ad-supported models are strong in entertainment, but paid upgrades thrive in fitness, productivity, and education.
For marketers
- Platform selection: TikTok and Instagram remain essential for global reach, but niche platforms like Telegram or Spotify offer targeted campaigns with engaged audiences.
- Audience insights: Younger users lean heavily on short-form content (TikTok, Reels), while professionals cluster on productivity and finance apps.
- Emerging platforms: Super apps and commerce-heavy platforms (Temu, Meesho) are creating fresh spaces for brand promotion.
- Content strategy: Bite-sized, authentic content works best, whether for entertainment, learning, or product discovery.
For investors
- Market size: Global app downloads crossed billions, with social, shopping, and finance apps leading the charge.
- Growth sectors: Video-based learning, fitness, and AI-powered productivity apps are showing the highest growth potential.
- Competitive landscape: Social is crowded, but fintech and health-tech apps still show room for breakout leaders in local markets.
- Valuation trends: Popularity directly boosts valuation—Temu, Shein, and Duolingo are examples of how user growth translates to billion-dollar company valuations.
For general users
- App discovery: With so many options, discovery is tough. Trusted reviews, curated lists, and in-app recommendations can help cut through the noise.
- Privacy considerations: Popular doesn’t always mean safe—be mindful of data collection policies, especially in finance and health apps.
- Productivity tips: Apps like Google Maps, Duolingo, or even AI assistants can drastically improve daily efficiency when used consistently.
- Security awareness: Stick to official app stores, keep permissions minimal, and watch for copycat apps that mimic popular platforms.
Conclusion
If there’s one thing this data makes clear, it’s that the app economy is not slowing down; it’s just shifting. Social giants like TikTok, Instagram, and WhatsApp continue to dominate, but challengers like Temu and Threads show how quickly user preferences can change.
AI is infiltrating every category, from productivity to entertainment, while education and finance apps are quietly establishing loyal user bases. For developers, marketers, investors, and everyday users, the takeaway is the same: stay adaptable. The apps we’ll all be swiping on in 2026 may not even exist yet.
FAQs about the most popular apps in the world
1. Are AI-powered apps becoming mainstream?
Yes. Apps like ChatGPT cracked the top 15 on both iOS and Google Play, demonstrating how quickly AI assistants are becoming an integral part of daily life.
2. What’s the difference between iOS and Google Play trends?
iOS leans toward premium, social, and utility apps (TikTok, Threads, ChatGPT), while Google Play is dominated by scale-driven apps popular in India and emerging markets (Instagram, Meesho, Truecaller).
3. What categories are expected to grow most in the next 2 years?
AI tools, education apps, health/wellness, and super apps (commerce + payments + social) are all positioned for strong growth through 2026.
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