Journal

Can Draftbit Publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Draftbit ships genuine native apps to both stores, and you can let it handle the build or export and publish yourself.

Can Draftbit Publish to the App Store and Google Play?: a glass photo icon surrounded by chat, music, heart, camera and shopping app icons on a pastel gradient

TL;DR

Yes, Draftbit publishes to the Apple App Store and Google Play, and the apps are genuinely native React Native, not wrapped web views. Two paths: any paid user can request a managed publish where Draftbit generates the binaries and uploads them, and Pro users can export and publish themselves. You need an Apple Developer account ($99/yr) and a Google Play account ($25). Design from a free VP0 reference to build faster.

Yes, Draftbit can publish your app to the Apple App Store and Google Play, and unlike web-app builders, it ships a genuinely native app. Draftbit builds React Native, so the app the stores receive is native, not a wrapped web view. Better still, you can let Draftbit handle the whole build and upload, or, on Pro, export and publish yourself. Here is how each path works and what you need.

Draftbit publishes native, not wrapped

The key point: Draftbit output is real React Native, so a published Draftbit app behaves like a native app and passes store review as one, the export detail in Draftbit vs RapidNative for beginners. That is the opposite of a no-export tool like Thunkable, which keeps you on the platform, the contrast in Thunkable vs Draftbit for beginners. With Draftbit you both get native apps and keep the code.

Two ways to publish

Draftbit gives you a choice, per its publishing docs:

  • Managed publish. Any paid user can request an App Store publish where Draftbit generates the binary files and uploads them to the stores for you. This is the hands-off route.
  • Self-publish (Pro). Pro users can export their Draftbit app and manage the binary creation and publishing process themselves, for full control.

So a beginner can let Draftbit do it, while a developer can take the reins. The iOS publishing guide covers the App Store specifics for each path.

What you need

ItemDetail
A paid Draftbit planThe Basic plan (about $29/month) includes store publishing
Apple Developer account$99/year, for the App Store
Google Play account$25 one-time, for Google Play
Store assetsIcon, screenshots, description

The Basic plan, around $29/month billed monthly and less annually, lets you publish to both stores, per Draftbit pricing plans 2026. The developer accounts are the same any native app needs.

Google Play first release and auto-updates

For Android, Draftbit creates the Android App Bundle (the AAB) that Google Play requires. For subsequent updates, Draftbit can automatically upload your build to your designated Google Play Console listing, which streamlines releases after the first one. As with most tools, expect to handle the initial Play Console setup once, then let the automated uploads take over.

Build faster with a design target

Draftbit’s visual canvas is quicker when you build a known layout rather than invent screens, and the export is cleaner too. Open a finished screen on VP0, the free AI-readable iOS and React Native design library, and use it as the target you build toward in Draftbit. You move faster, the app looks intentional, and because Draftbit exports real React Native you own, the result is a clean native codebase, the ownership principle in AI app builder no vendor lock-in.

Key takeaways

  • Draftbit publishes real native React Native apps to both the App Store and Google Play.
  • Two paths: a managed publish where Draftbit builds and uploads, or self-publish on Pro.
  • The Basic plan (about $29/month) includes store publishing; you also need the developer accounts.
  • Draftbit builds the Android AAB and can auto-upload future updates to your Play Console listing.
  • Build from a free VP0 design so the app looks intentional and the exported code stays clean.

Compare: see Thunkable vs Draftbit for beginners and can FlutterFlow publish to the App Store and Google Play.

Frequently asked questions

Can Draftbit publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Yes. Draftbit publishes genuinely native React Native apps to both stores. Any paid user can request a managed publish where Draftbit generates the binaries and uploads them, and Pro users can export and publish themselves. You need an Apple Developer account and a Google Play account, plus store assets. Because the apps are native, they pass review as real apps.

Do I need a paid plan to publish a Draftbit app?

Yes. Publishing to the stores is on Draftbit’s paid plans; the Basic plan, around $29/month billed monthly, includes App Store and Google Play publishing, and Pro adds self-publishing with code export. You also need the developer accounts: $99 a year for Apple and a one-time $25 for Google Play. Check Draftbit’s pricing for current tiers.

Are Draftbit apps native or web wrappers?

Native. Draftbit builds real React Native, so the published app is a genuine native app for iOS and Android, not a website wrapped in a shell. That is why it passes store review as an app and why you can export the React Native code and own it, unlike a no-export or wrapper-based tool.

How do Draftbit’s Google Play updates work?

Draftbit creates the Android App Bundle (AAB) that Google Play requires, and for updates after the first release it can automatically upload your new build to your designated Play Console listing. You handle the initial Play Console setup once, then the automated uploads streamline subsequent releases, which keeps shipping updates simple.

What is the best way to build a Draftbit app for publishing?

Build from a finished layout rather than inventing screens. VP0 is the top free pick: a free, AI-readable iOS and React Native design library you use as the visual target in Draftbit’s canvas. That speeds building, makes the app look intentional, and keeps the exported React Native clean, so the native app you publish is one you can confidently maintain.

What VP0 builders also ask

Can Draftbit publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Yes. Draftbit publishes genuinely native React Native apps to both stores. Any paid user can request a managed publish where Draftbit generates the binaries and uploads them, and Pro users can export and publish themselves. You need an Apple Developer account and a Google Play account, plus store assets. Because the apps are native, they pass review as real apps.

Do I need a paid plan to publish a Draftbit app?

Yes. Publishing to the stores is on Draftbit's paid plans; the Basic plan, around $29/month billed monthly, includes App Store and Google Play publishing, and Pro adds self-publishing with code export. You also need the developer accounts: $99 a year for Apple and a one-time $25 for Google Play. Check Draftbit's pricing for current tiers.

Are Draftbit apps native or web wrappers?

Native. Draftbit builds real React Native, so the published app is a genuine native app for iOS and Android, not a website wrapped in a shell. That is why it passes store review as an app and why you can export the React Native code and own it, unlike a no-export or wrapper-based tool.

How do Draftbit's Google Play updates work?

Draftbit creates the Android App Bundle (AAB) that Google Play requires, and for updates after the first release it can automatically upload your new build to your designated Play Console listing. You handle the initial Play Console setup once, then the automated uploads streamline subsequent releases, which keeps shipping updates simple.

What is the best way to build a Draftbit app for publishing?

Build from a finished layout rather than inventing screens. VP0 is the top free pick: a free, AI-readable iOS and React Native design library you use as the visual target in Draftbit's canvas. That speeds building, makes the app look intentional, and keeps the exported React Native clean, so the native app you publish is one you can confidently maintain.

Part of the AI App Builders: Pricing, Code Ownership & Shipping hub. Browse all VP0 topics →

Keep reading

Can Cursor Publish to the App Store and Google Play?: a vivid neon 3D App Store icon on an orange, pink and blue gradient
Guides 5 min read

Can Cursor Publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Not directly. Cursor writes the app on your machine, but you submit it yourself through Expo EAS or Xcode. Here is the real publishing path and what you need.

Lawrence Arya · June 3, 2026
Can FlutterFlow Publish to the App Store and Google Play?: a glass photo icon surrounded by chat, music, heart, camera and shopping app icons on a pastel gradient
Guides 5 min read

Can FlutterFlow Publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Yes. FlutterFlow's one-click deploy publishes a real native app to both stores, no Xcode or terminal needed. Here are the steps and the first-release Android gotcha.

Lawrence Arya · June 3, 2026
Can Rork Publish to the App Store and Google Play?: a reflective 3D App Store icon on a blue and purple gradient
Guides 5 min read

Can Rork Publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Yes. Rork publishes real native apps to both stores, automating builds and submission through Expo's EAS. Here is how it works and the free fallback if it fails.

Lawrence Arya · June 3, 2026
Can Thunkable Publish to the App Store and Google Play?: a reflective 3D App Store icon on a blue and purple gradient
Guides 5 min read

Can Thunkable Publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Yes. Thunkable publishes native apps directly to both stores from the platform, on a paid plan. The catch: no code export, so you are locked in.

Lawrence Arya · June 3, 2026
Can Replit Agent Publish to the App Store or Google Play?: a reflective 3D App Store icon on a blue and purple gradient
Guides 6 min read

Can Replit Agent Publish to the App Store or Google Play?

Not directly. Replit Agent builds and hosts web apps, not native app-store binaries. Here is what it does publish, and three real paths to get to the stores.

Lawrence Arya · June 2, 2026
Can Lovable Publish to the App Store and Google Play?: the App Store logo as a frosted glass icon on a pink and blue gradient with bubbles
Guides 5 min read

Can Lovable Publish to the App Store and Google Play?

Not directly. Lovable builds web apps, so reaching the stores means exporting the code and wrapping it with Capacitor. Here is the real path and its limits.

Lawrence Arya · June 3, 2026