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Build iOS apps by describing what you want. Anything generates React Native code—from prompt to App Store in three steps.
We’re continuing to add features to mobile apps with active development. Your real-world examples help us prioritize improvements. Try building different apps and tell us what works and what breaks.

Get your app on the App Store

Follow these three steps to go from idea to published iOS app:

1. Design your mobile app

Describe your app idea in the builder. Anything generates React Native code with AI-designed interfaces for iOS. You get:
Authentication in Mobile Apps: Per Apple’s App Store guidelines, Google and Facebook SSO cannot be present in iOS mobile builds until the “Sign in with Apple” feature is released. Do not implement Google or Facebook authentication in mobile apps until Sign in with Apple is available.

2. Test on your iPhone

Test your app on your iPhone using the Anything iOS App. Device features like camera, location, and sensors work on your device but not in the web preview. Learn how to test your app in our Testing & Debugging Guide.
Device features like camera, location, and barcode scanning won’t work in web preview. Test on your iPhone for full functionality.

3. Submit to TestFlight/Apple

Once your app is ready, deploy to the App Store via TestFlight. Follow our iOS publishing guide for step-by-step instructions.

Learn more

Device capabilities

Use camera, location, sensors, and 39+ other device features. We’re adding more constantly. See the complete Device Capabilities Guide.

Publishing

Testing and debugging

Test and debug your app with our Testing & Debugging Guide.

FAQ

We’ve built features to support this, you can ask the builder to “generate a mobile app from this web app” and it will work to create a mobile based design of your existing web project.
No! Anything handles all React Native code for you. Just describe what you want.
Yes, iOS publication to App Store is live today.
Yes, you need an active Apple Developer Account to publish your app to the App Store. Verify your Apple Developer Account is active before publishing.
You handle app signing certificates yourself for now. We’ll simplify this in future updates.
Yes! Your mobile app connects to the same database as your web app.
Anything automatically generates responsive layouts that adapt to different device sizes.
iOS mobile apps must use RevenueCat (Beta) for all payments and subscriptions. RevenueCat handles in-app purchases, subscriptions, and paywalls for iOS apps. Web apps use Stripe for payments.
Need help? Email us at [email protected]