Apple's WebKit Rules Reportedly Cost iOS Users Almost 30% Browser Performance

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Apple's WebKit Rules Reportedly Cost iOS Users Almost 30% Browser Performance - MacRumors

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Apple's WebKit Rules Reportedly Cost iOS Users Almost 30% Browser Performance

Wednesday June 17, 2026 9:14 am PDT by Hartley Charlton<br>Microsoft engineers have published benchmark results showing that a Chromium-based browser using its own rendering engine scores 28.6% higher than Safari on Apple's own Speedometer 3.1 performance test on iOS.

Kyle Pflug, group product manager for the Microsoft Edge Web Platform, published results on Monday comparing a research prototype of Edge built with Apple's BrowserEngineKit framework against Safari running iOS 26.5.1. The Blink-based prototype scored 49.27 versus Safari's 38.3 on Speedometer 3.1, and also outperformed Safari on the JetStream 3 JavaScript benchmark by 13.1% (306.35 vs. 270.9) and on the MotionMark 1.3.1 graphics rendering benchmark by 2.1% (4,773.52 vs. 4,673.68). Pflug described the work as a research prototype rather than a finished product, and the numbers as preliminary results from his own device rather than lab conditions.

Apple requires all browsers on iOS to use WebKit, the engine that powers Safari, meaning browsers like Chrome and Firefox on iPhone are effectively reskinned Safari instances. The EU's Digital Markets Act theoretically changed that in March 2024, requiring Apple to allow alternative browser engines through BrowserEngineKit, yet more than two years later no browser maker has shipped an alternative engine on iOS. Companies cite technical barriers and the requirement to publish any such browser as an entirely separate app from their existing WebKit-based version.

Open Web Advocacy told The Register the results illustrate a 17-year cost to consumers. The group called on the European Commission to open a specification proceeding instructing Apple precisely how it must remove barriers to alternative engines, adding that restricting browser engines allows Apple to limit what the mobile web is capable of and keep businesses dependent on native apps and App Store rules.

Tag: WebKit

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Top Rated Comments

HouseLannister<br>1 hour ago at 09:30 am

Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)

BuffaloTF<br>1 hour ago at 09:33 am

Requiring Webkit is ridiculous but that's what Apple does to stifle competition.

On the contrary, it forces competition. Without it, Chromium/Blink would just walk away with the entire market. Having 20 different wrappers on chromium isn’t competition, but having WebKit out there sure is competition for chromium.<br>Score: 17 Votes (Like | Disagree)

cjsuk<br>2 hours ago at 09:23 am

The speedometer doesn't matter. It's fractional gains on modern machines. You'd only notice if you're running a fat turd of a web app or ads. Oh wait, hang on it's an ad company?

The user experience is better on Firefox with uBlock.<br>Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)

cjsuk<br>2 hours ago at 09:25 am

Someone educate me. Why are browsers so competitive? Do they make money themselves? Like… that’s the deal.

Well only Google / Chrome seems to care because they get to define capability then and push their own feature agenda.

Chrome is basically the new IE6 at this point.<br>Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)

gummybear2026<br>2 hours ago at...

apple webkit browser safari like iphone

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