Apple's services are bundled in marketing, but they are not all available in the same countries. Each one has its own list, shaped mostly by content licensing and local partnerships.
Entertainment availability is driven less by technology and more by rights. Music catalogues, TV shows and films, news publications, and even workout content must be licensed for each territory, and those agreements are negotiated separately. A service launches in a country only once the necessary rights and local arrangements are in place, which is why the country lists for Apple Music, the Apple TV app, and Apple News look so different from one another.
There is an important distinction between a service being available in your country and the catalogue you get once you subscribe. Apple Music may be available almost everywhere, but specific albums can be missing in some territories. The Apple TV app may be installed in many countries while the exact shows differ. Our map tracks whether Apple lists the service as offered in a region; it does not attempt to catalogue every title, which changes constantly.
Service availability shifts as Apple expands into new markets. The map refreshes daily from Apple's official listings, and the changelog records each change.
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