Apple got this much from Google for allowing Search to be iPhone default engine
The amount Google paid in 2021 was around $15 billion, numbers disclosed through documents that are part of US Department of Justice’ antitrust lawsuit showed.
Google's parent company Alphabet paid $20 billion to Apple in 2022 to maintain its status as the default search engine on Apple’s web browser Safari, it was reported. The amount Google paid in 2021 was around $15 billion, Bloomberg reported citing numbers disclosed through documents which are a part of the US Department of Justice’s antitrust lawsuit against Google.

Read more: Google layoffs: ‘Core’ employees fired, Sundar Pichai moving positions to India
How much Google has paid Apple over the years?
As Google faces the antritrust case which looks at its deal with Apple and how it helped the company monopolise online search business, it was reported that the amount paid by Google to Apple increased in the last couple of years.
It was $15 billion in 2021 and the recent increase shows Google's ambition to maintain a default position with its search engine.
Read more: When Satya Nadella and Bill Gates were 'very worried' about Google's AI progress: Email from 2019 shows
Does Apple give users choice to change search engine?
No, Apple does give users a choice to change the search engine on all of its devices although options like Bing, DuckDuckGo are available to users. By default, Google Search is set as the primary search engine in Safari on iPhones, iPads and Macs.
Read more: Joe Biden says 'xenophobia' stalling China, India economy: 'They don't want immigrants but US…'
Have other companies attempted to strike deal with Apple?
Yes, companies like Microsoft have attempted to negotiate similar agreements with Apple which have reportedly been unsuccessful. It was earlier reported that Microsoft wanted to sell Bing to Apple. Meanwhile, Apple could be in talks with Google to integrate Gemini AI in its devices.