Definition
The App Title (also called App Name) is the primary text identifier of an app in the store — visible in search results, on the product page, and on the user's device after installation. It is the single highest-weighted metadata field for Search Result Ranking on every platform. Keyword placement in the title carries more ranking weight than any other field, making title optimization the most impactful tactical decision in App Store Optimization (ASO).
How It Works
The title serves two simultaneous purposes:
- Search ranking — keywords in the title receive the strongest algorithmic weight
- Brand recognition + conversion — the title must communicate what the app does and build trust
These purposes often conflict: a keyword-stuffed title ranks better but converts worse; a brand-only title converts well but misses keyword opportunities.
Apple App Store
- Character limit: 30 characters
- Indexing: Highest weight among all indexed fields
- Truncation: Full title typically visible in search results on most devices; may truncate on smaller screens around 25 characters
- Combinatorial matching: Title words combine with Subtitle and Keyword Field words to create indexed multi-word phrases
- Update requirement: Title changes require an app version submission and review
- Best formula:
[Brand Name] - [Primary Keyword]or[Primary Keyword] - [Brand Name] - Position weight: Keywords appearing earlier in the title receive stronger algorithmic weight
Google Play Store
- Character limit: 30 characters (reduced from 50 in 2021)
- Indexing: Highest weight; the reduced limit makes every character critical
- Truncation: Full 30 characters visible in most search result cards
- Semantic weight: Title keywords strongly signal app topic to Google's semantic ranking model
- Update requirement: Can be changed without new app version
- Restrictions: No emojis, no ALL CAPS, no misleading claims, no keyword stuffing
Amazon Appstore
- Character limit: 200 characters (but only 40-70 visible on mobile Fire devices)
- Indexing: Highest weight field
- Truncation: Significant — only first 40-70 characters show on Fire TV/Tablet
- Strategy: Front-load brand + primary keyword in first 40 characters
- Voice search: Title is the primary field matched by Alexa voice queries
Formulas & Metrics
Title keyword utilization:
Utilization = Characters_Used / Character_Limit × 100%
Target: >90% utilization. Empty characters = missed keyword opportunity.
Title keyword score:
Title_Score = Σ (Keyword_Volume_i × In_Title_Weight) for each keyword in title
Brand vs. keyword positioning decision matrix:
| Brand Awareness | Monthly Brand Searches | Recommended Format |
|---|---|---|
| High (>10K brand searches) | >10,000 | Brand first: "Spotify - Music & Podcasts" |
| Medium (1K-10K) | 1,000-10,000 | Flexible: test both positions |
| Low (<1K) | <1,000 | Keyword first: "Music Player - BrandName" |
Title Patterns That Work
Three dominant patterns emerge from top-ranking apps:
Pattern 1: Brand First (for established apps)
- Spotify — Music and Podcasts
- Duolingo — Language Lessons
- Headspace: Mindful Meditation
These brands command search volume by name. Putting the brand first ensures users find them instantly. The keyword after the separator captures generic searches.
Pattern 2: Keyword First (for new or growing apps)
- Meditation & Sleep — Calm Plus
- Budget Planner — YNAB Pro
- Calorie Counter — MyFitnessPal
If nobody is searching for your brand yet, lead with the keyword users are searching for. The primary keyword gets the most algorithmic weight from position one. The brand follows to build recognition.
Pattern 3: Pure Keyword (maximum search relevance)
- To-Do List & Task Manager
- Photo Editor & Design Studio
- Habit Tracker & Goal Planner
This approach maximizes search relevance but sacrifices brand building. It works for utility apps in competitive categories where the function is the selling point.
Best Practices
- Include your #1 keyword in the title — no other optimization has comparable ranking impact. If "photo editor" is your top keyword, it must be in the title.
- Use all available characters — every unused character is wasted ranking potential. A 15-character title on Apple wastes 50% of the field.
- Front-load high-priority keywords — Apple's algorithm gives extra weight to keywords that appear earlier in the title. For new apps with no brand recognition, keyword-first positioning is almost always the right choice.
- Test brand position — run an wiki:ab-testing (using third-party tools, since Product Page Optimization (PPO) can't test titles) to determine if brand-first or keyword-first converts better for your app.
- Avoid keyword stuffing — "Photo Edit Filter Collage Enhance Pro" reads poorly, violates guidelines, and may trigger review rejection. Keep it readable: "PhotoApp - Editor & Filters."
- Don't duplicate keywords across title and subtitle (Apple) — Apple indexes both together. Use the subtitle for different keywords to maximize your 60 combined characters of indexed real estate.
- Avoid trademarked competitor names — using competitor brand names in your title can result in app rejection or legal action.
- Front-load on Amazon — with severe truncation (40-70 chars visible), the most important keywords must come first.
- Never use ALL CAPS or emojis — ALL CAPS ("BEST Workout PRO") triggers review flags and looks unprofessional. Apple explicitly prohibits emojis in app names. Special characters like ™ or © waste characters without adding searchable value.
- Update quarterly — search trends change, competitors shift, and new keywords emerge. Top-performing apps update their titles at least quarterly based on keyword performance data.
Examples
Before optimization:
- "MyApp" (5 chars / 30 — wastes 83% of character space, zero keyword value)
After optimization (Apple):
- "MyApp - Photo Editor & Retouch" (30 chars — brand + 2 high-volume keywords)
After optimization (Google Play):
- "MyApp: Photo Editor & Filters" (29 chars — brand + 2 keywords, natural)
After optimization (Amazon):
- "MyApp - Photo Editor, Filters & Retouching for Pictures" (55 chars — front-loaded keywords for truncation)
Dependencies
Influences (this term affects)
- Relevance Score — title keywords have the highest relevance weight
- Search Result Ranking — title is the #1 ranking factor
- Conversion Rate — title clarity affects user trust and tap-through
- Brand ASO — title defines the brand's search identity
- Keyword Indexing (iOS) — title words enter the combinatorial index
Depends On (affected by)
- Keyword Research — research determines which keywords belong in the title
- Competitive ASO — competitor titles inform positioning strategy
- Brand Awareness — brand strength determines brand vs. keyword priority
- Apple Search Algorithm / Google Play Search Algorithm — algorithms determine title's ranking weight
Platform Comparison
| Aspect | Apple App Store | Google Play | Amazon Appstore |
|---|---|---|---|
| Character limit | 30 | 30 (reduced from 50) | 200 (40-70 visible) |
| Ranking weight | Highest | Highest | Highest |
| Update requires review? | Yes | No | No |
| Combinatorial matching | Yes (with subtitle + KW field) | N/A (full text indexed) | Partial |
| Emoji allowed? | No | No | No |
| Truncation in search | ~25-30 chars visible | ~30 chars visible | ~40-70 chars visible |
| Position weighting | Earlier = stronger | Earlier = stronger | Front-loading critical |
Related Terms
- Subtitle
- Keyword Field
- Short Description
- Metadata Optimization
- Brand ASO
- Keyword Relevance
- Relevance Score
Sources & Further Reading
- Apple: App Store Product Page Guidelines
- Google: Store Listing Best Practices
- ZeePalm: iOS Keyword Optimization Guide (2024)
- Stormy AI: ASO Playbook (2025)
Recent Updates
- 2021-XX-XX: Google Play reduced title character limit from 50 to 30 characters
- 2026-04-19: Analysis of top-ranking apps confirmed three dominant title patterns (brand-first, keyword-first, pure keyword) with clear use cases for each based on brand awareness levels