Understanding “Publisher-of-Record”: What It Really Means for App Owners

Learn how a Publisher-of-Record can streamline your app publishing process while ensuring compliance and risk management.

When publishing a mobile app, one term often appears late in the process — sometimes too late:

Publisher-of-Record (PoR).

It sounds administrative, but in reality, it defines who is legally, financially, and operationally responsible for the app.
Misunderstanding this concept has caused many startups unnecessary friction, delays, and even account shutdowns.

This article explains what Publisher-of-Record really means — and why it matters more than most founders expect.


What Is “Publisher-of-Record”?

The Publisher-of-Record is the entity officially responsible for an app in the eyes of platforms like Apple and Google.

That entity:

In short:

The Publisher-of-Record is the party the platform holds accountable — not your developers, not your agency, not your hosting provider.


Why App Stores Care About Publisher-of-Record

App stores operate at global scale.
They need a single, clearly identifiable party to hold responsible for:

If something goes wrong, the platform does not investigate internal arrangements.
It contacts — or penalizes — the Publisher-of-Record.


Common Misunderstandings

❌ “Our development agency is the publisher”

This is one of the most common and risky assumptions.

If an agency publishes the app under their account:

Recovering ownership later can be painful and time-consuming.


❌ “We’ll fix it after launch”

Changing Publisher-of-Record after launch is not trivial.

It may require:

Planning it correctly from day one is far easier.


Who Should Be the Publisher-of-Record?

In most cases, the Publisher-of-Record should be:

For example:

At Blue Ember Studios, we strongly recommend that clients own their own developer accounts, even when we manage publishing on their behalf.


Publisher-of-Record vs Developer vs Owner

These roles are often confused:

Role Responsibility
Publisher-of-Record Legal & platform responsibility
Developer Builds and maintains the app
Product Owner Defines vision and roadmap

One entity can play multiple roles — but they are not automatically the same.


Financial & Tax Implications

The Publisher-of-Record:

This has real accounting and compliance consequences.

Choosing the wrong Publisher-of-Record can complicate:


What Happens If You Get It Wrong?

Potential consequences include:

These issues rarely appear immediately — but when they do, they’re disruptive.


Best Practices (Simple & Safe)

  1. Decide Publisher-of-Record early

  2. Create developer accounts under your own entity

  3. Grant agencies access, not ownership

  4. Document roles clearly in contracts

  5. Treat publishing as a legal decision, not a technical one


Final Thought

Publisher-of-Record is not a technical checkbox.
It’s a governance decision.

Understanding it early protects:

In app development, clarity of ownership is just as important as clarity of code.