App Store Description Best Practices: Write Copy That Converts
Your app store description is one of the most underoptimized elements in mobile marketing. Developers spend months perfecting their app's functionality, hours designing the icon, and minutes — if that — writing the description. Yet this text directly influences both your search rankings and your conversion rate.
On Google Play, the description is your primary keyword vehicle. On iOS, it shapes user expectations and drives install decisions. In both stores, well-crafted description copy separates apps that convert at 40% from those stuck at 15%.
This guide covers how to write app store descriptions that rank for target keywords and persuade users to install — for both Apple App Store and Google Play.
How Descriptions Work on Each Platform
Apple App Store Description
Indexing: Apple does NOT index the long description for search rankings. Your description does not directly affect keyword rankings on iOS.
But it still matters because:
- It appears on your product page below the fold
- Users who scroll to read it are in a decision-making moment — your copy can tip them toward installing
- Apple's editorial team reads descriptions when considering app features
- The promotional text field (170 characters, changeable without a new version) appears above the description and can influence tap-to-install behavior
Fields:
- Promotional text: 170 characters. Visible at the top of the description area. Can be updated anytime without submitting a new version. Use for timely messaging (sales, new features, seasonal content).
- Description: 4,000 characters. Updated only with new app versions. This is your main persuasion copy.
Google Play Description
Indexing: Google fully indexes both the short description and long description. Keywords in your description directly affect search rankings.
Fields:
- Short description: 80 characters. Appears in search results and at the top of your listing. High keyword weight + high visibility = critical real estate.
- Long description: 4,000 characters. Fully indexed by Google's algorithm. Keyword placement and density directly impact which terms you rank for.
The Dual Objective
This creates a dual writing challenge:
- For iOS: Write primarily for conversion (persuade humans to install)
- For Google Play: Write for both conversion AND ranking (persuade humans while strategically placing keywords for the algorithm)
The best descriptions accomplish both simultaneously through natural, benefit-oriented copy that happens to include target keywords.
Structural Framework for App Store Descriptions
The Inverted Pyramid Structure
Borrow from journalism: put the most important information first, then expand with details.
First 1-3 lines (above the fold): Your hook. This is the only text most users see before tapping "Read More." Make it count.
Body paragraphs: Feature descriptions, use cases, and social proof. Organized by priority.
Closing: Call to action, trust signals, and remaining keyword-rich content.
Recommended Structure
[Hook: 1-2 sentences that communicate your core value proposition]
[Social proof: award, rating, user count, or press mention]
KEY FEATURES:
• Feature 1 — benefit statement
• Feature 2 — benefit statement
• Feature 3 — benefit statement
• Feature 4 — benefit statement
• Feature 5 — benefit statement
[Use case section: 2-3 scenarios showing who the app is for]
[Trust/credibility section: awards, press mentions, user testimonials]
[Subscription/pricing transparency]
[Call to action]
Writing the Opening Lines
The first 1-3 lines of your description are disproportionately important. On both stores, this is what appears before the "Read More" truncation. Most users never tap to expand.
What Works
Lead with the benefit, not the feature:
- ✅ "Take control of your finances in under 5 minutes a day."
- ❌ "A comprehensive personal finance management application."
Use specific numbers when possible:
- ✅ "Join 10 million users who've saved an average of $1,200 in their first year."
- ❌ "Many users have saved money with our app."
Address the user directly:
- ✅ "Track your workouts, hit your goals, and see real results — all in one app."
- ❌ "This app tracks workouts and helps users achieve their fitness goals."
Create urgency or curiosity:
- ✅ "The #1 meditation app that even skeptics love. See why 50,000+ five-star reviewers agree."
- ❌ "A meditation app with high ratings."
Opening Line Formulas
Formula 1 — Problem + Solution:
"Tired of [problem]? [App name] makes it easy to [solution] in [timeframe]."
Formula 2 — Social Proof + Benefit:
"Trusted by [number] users worldwide, [App name] is the easiest way to [core benefit]."
Formula 3 — Bold Claim + Evidence:
"The only [category] app you'll ever need. [Evidence: rating, award, or stat]."
Formula 4 — Direct Value Statement:
"[Action verb] your [noun] with [App name] — [unique differentiator]."
Writing Feature Descriptions
Features vs. Benefits
The most common description mistake is listing features without connecting them to user benefits:
| Feature | Benefit-Oriented Version |
|---|---|
| Push notifications | Never miss an important task — smart reminders keep you on track |
| Cloud sync | Access your data from any device, anywhere |
| Dark mode | Easy on the eyes during late-night sessions |
| AI-powered suggestions | Get personalized recommendations that actually match your taste |
| Offline mode | Keep working even without an internet connection |
Feature Bullet Best Practices
- Lead with the benefit, follow with the feature: "Save hours every week — automated expense categorization sorts your transactions instantly"
- Use action verbs: Track, Create, Discover, Manage, Sync, Share, Customize, Export, Analyze
- Be specific: "100+ workout templates" beats "lots of workout options"
- Limit to 5-8 key features: More than this creates decision fatigue. Focus on your strongest differentiators.
- Order by importance: Lead with your most compelling feature
Feature Section Formatting
Use visual markers for scanability:
◆ SMART BUDGETS — Set monthly limits by category and get alerts before you overspend
◆ AUTOMATIC SYNC — Connect your bank and credit cards for real-time transaction tracking
◆ VISUAL INSIGHTS — Interactive charts show exactly where your money goes
◆ BILL REMINDERS — Never miss a payment with intelligent due date notifications
◆ GOAL TRACKING — Set savings goals and watch your progress with motivating milestones
Both stores support Unicode characters (◆, •, ✓, ★) for visual formatting. Use them consistently.
Keyword Optimization (Google Play Specific)
Since Google indexes the long description, keyword strategy is critical:
Keyword Density Guidelines
- Primary keyword: 3-5 mentions across the full description (1.5-2.5% density)
- Secondary keywords: 2-3 mentions each
- Long-tail variations: 1-2 mentions each
- Total keyword density: Keep under 4% to avoid appearing spammy
Natural Keyword Placement
In the opening:
"The most powerful budget tracker and expense manager for anyone who wants to take control of their personal finances."
(Hits: "budget tracker," "expense manager," "personal finances")
In feature descriptions:
"Our smart keyword research tool helps you find the best app store keywords with real volume data and difficulty scores."
(Hits: "keyword research tool," "app store keywords," "keyword difficulty")
In the closing:
"Download the top-rated budget app and join millions who've simplified their financial planning with smart money management."
(Hits: "budget app," "financial planning," "money management")
What to Avoid
- Keyword stuffing: "Best budget app free budget tracker budget planner budgeting tool" — Google will penalize this
- Competitor mentions: Naming competitors violates store policies
- Unnatural repetition: If a keyword phrase appears more than 5 times, it's too many
- ALL CAPS keyword sections: Looks spammy and hurts conversion
Writing for Different App Categories
Productivity Apps
- Emphasize time savings and efficiency gains
- Use specific metrics ("save 3 hours per week")
- Highlight integrations with popular tools
- Mention team/collaboration features if applicable
Health & Fitness Apps
- Lead with transformation and results
- Include safety disclaimers where appropriate
- Mention credentials (designed with doctors, trainers, etc.)
- Highlight personalization ("adapts to YOUR fitness level")
Gaming Apps
- Focus on experience and emotion, not just mechanics
- Mention content volume ("500+ levels," "50+ characters")
- Highlight competitive/social features
- Note if it works offline
Finance Apps
- Prioritize trust and security
- Mention encryption, data protection, and privacy
- Use specific savings or ROI numbers
- Include bank compatibility information
Social/Communication Apps
- Emphasize community size and activity
- Highlight privacy and safety features
- Mention unique interaction mechanics
- Focus on connection and belonging
The Promotional Text Field (iOS)
The promotional text is a powerful, underused tool:
What it is: 170 characters displayed above your description. Can be changed anytime without a new app version.
Best uses:
- Announce new features: "NEW: AI-powered workout recommendations — try them today!"
- Seasonal messaging: "Start 2026 strong — 50% off annual plans this month"
- Event promotion: "Join our January fitness challenge — 100K+ participants"
- Social proof updates: "Just hit 5 million downloads! Thank you for your support"
Update cadence: Change promotional text monthly or with each significant event. This keeps your listing feeling fresh and current.
Localization: Descriptions for Global Markets
Don't Just Translate — Adapt
Direct translation produces awkward, unconvincing copy. For each market:
- Research local competitors to understand description conventions
- Adapt tone and formality level (German descriptions tend to be more formal; Brazilian Portuguese is more casual)
- Localize examples, currencies, and references
- Adjust feature emphasis based on market preferences
- Use professional translators, not machine translation
Keyword Localization for Google Play
For Google Play, description localization is also a keyword opportunity:
- Research which keywords users search for in each language (don't just translate English keywords)
- Some markets search using English terms even in non-English locales
- Localized descriptions should follow the same density guidelines as English
A/B Testing Your Description
What to Test
- Opening line variants — different hooks, value propositions, or social proof elements
- Feature order — which features resonate most when placed first?
- Feature count — does listing 5 features or 8 features convert better?
- Tone — professional vs. casual, technical vs. simple
- Social proof placement — opening vs. closing
- Call-to-action copy — different CTA wording
Testing Methodology
On Google Play: Use the Store Listing Experiments feature for native A/B testing. Set up two description variants, split traffic 50/50, and run for at least 7 days with 1,000+ visitors per variant.
On iOS: Apple doesn't support description A/B testing natively. Options:
- Test different promotional text variants (can be changed without a version update)
- Use Custom Product Pages with different promotional text
- Compare conversion rates before and after description changes (less reliable due to confounders)
Measuring Description Effectiveness
Track these metrics to evaluate description performance:
Scroll depth (indirect): If your conversion rate increases after improving description quality, it suggests users were reading and being influenced by the copy.
Conversion rate change: The primary metric. Compare CR for the 2 weeks before and after a description change, accounting for external factors.
Keyword ranking changes (Google Play): Monitor whether target keywords improve in rankings after description optimization. Allow 5-7 days for re-indexing.
User feedback: If users frequently say "the app isn't what I expected," your description may be setting incorrect expectations. If users say "this does exactly what the description said," you've aligned expectations well.
Common Description Mistakes
Writing for yourself, not your user. Technical jargon and feature specifications impress developers, not users. Write at an 8th-grade reading level.
Burying the value proposition. If users have to read 500 words to understand what your app does, most won't bother. Lead with your strongest benefit.
Being generic. "The best way to manage your tasks" could describe 10,000 apps. Be specific about what makes your approach different.
Ignoring formatting. Wall-of-text descriptions are skipped. Use line breaks, bullets, emoji markers, and section headers for scanability.
Not updating. Descriptions written at launch often reference outdated features or miss newer capabilities. Update your description with every major feature release.
Overpromising. Descriptions that promise transformative results set expectations that lead to disappointment, negative reviews, and uninstalls. Be honest and specific about what your app delivers.
Conclusion
Your app store description is a conversion tool that too many developers treat as an afterthought. On Google Play, it's also a keyword ranking tool. In both cases, the investment in writing compelling, well-structured, benefit-oriented description copy pays dividends through higher conversion rates and (on Google Play) improved search visibility.
Start with a strong opening that hooks readers in the first 2 lines. Structure features as benefits, not specifications. Optimize for keywords naturally (especially on Google Play). Test and iterate based on data. The description that converts best is the one that clearly communicates your app's unique value in language your users understand and respond to.






