IDC: iPad Now Under 50 Percent Market Share and Falling

Android is the new king of the tablet market

The market analysts at IDC have weighed in on worldwide tablet sales and while Apple’s iPad is still the best-seller, competitors like Samsung and Amazon lopped off a bunch of market share in 2012. More important, perhaps: The iPad now accounts for well under 50 percent of all tablet sales.

The big takeaway here, however, is that Android tablet sales now collectively outsell the iPad, the device that started this new market.

According to IDC, the iPad fell to just 43.6 percent market share by the end of 2012, down from about 52 percent earlier, thanks to sharply rising sales of Samsung, Amazon, and ASUS devices. Apple’s iPad sales actually grew 48 percent in the fourth quarter, compared to the same quarter a year earlier, with the firm delivering 22.9 million iPads to customers.

But sales of Samsung and ASUS tablets, in particular, grew much faster. Samsung, the number two tablet maker, sold 7.9 million tablets in Q4 2012, a jump of 263 percent. And ASUS, the number three tablet maker with 3.1 million units sold, saw sales jump 403 percent. Apple can’t claim it has outpaced the sales growth of the competition in this market, as routinely claims of Macs compared to other PCs.

Amazon was the number three tablet maker: It sold 6 million Kindle Fire and Kindle Fire HD tablets in the quarter, IDC claims, up 27 percent year-over-year.

You may be wondering where Microsoft figures into this tally. They don’t: Microsoft’s Surface tablets are considered PCs and are still measured against PC sales. These tablets are so-called “media tablets” and include smaller, ~7-inch devices that are used only for media consumption as well as “full-sized” tablets that typically sport 10-inch screens.

Discuss this Article 9

thundr35
on Jan 31, 2013

Not sure if MS should be happy they're not being included with those tablet sales (and be depressed by their pathetic numbers) or sad that they're being included with declining PC sales. Either way, they've got a lot of work to do.

jimbie882
on Jan 31, 2013

The lower cost Android tablets are beating the iPads just like the lower cost Android phones are beating the iPhones. Despite this, Apple is making 75% of the profits. Structurally, Apple needs to sell cheaper iPads and iPhones. It also needs to increase manufacturing by two fold to keep up with demand. I'm not convinced this approach is necessary or warranted. Chasing marketshare is not always the best way to win. The market will never be 100% any manufacturer. We can make the case that Windows was very close to 100% for a very long time; however, I thought Apple messed up in a huge way under previous management (non-Jobs). However, to this day, Macs are still over $1,000, which is why the mass market PC for Apple is the lower cost iPad.

The big question is will Apple every sell a cheap PC or tablet for $200. If possible, Apple will ALMOST corner the market. Maybe there is a way. A iPad that sells for $200 with 4G subscription service.

PRyan0417
on Jan 31, 2013

I hate it when people assume that Android has more market share than iOS because it's "cheap" or because there are so many of them. The fact is that a single manufacturer of Android handsets, Samsung, is beating Apple with two phones. Yes, they make more, but the only ones that sell are the current Galaxy and Note. That's two Android handsets against three iPhone handsets, and both of those Android handsets are priced similarly to the newest iPhone, which means Apple is losing while selling one similarly priced iPhone and two cheap ones (iPhone 4 and 4s).

Also, I certainly didn't choose Android because it was cheaper. I and many others who own $400+ ($200+ subsidized) choose Android because we believe it is better than the outdated and bland iOS. You can't claim it's because of price when the two Android handsets that are selling are the same price as the current iPhone.

GWLeibniz
on Feb 1, 2013

Disclaimer - I don't own Android or Apple anything, and very old - so no axe to grind maybe. But here, London, Apple stuff is fast losing its cachet amongst the radical young. Maybe the 35year old designer type still clinging to youth is all Appled up, but BB and Android is what is in the hands of the 12 to 25 year olds. So IMHO Apple has to change its target demographic to stay on top

RonV42
on Feb 1, 2013

I have one daughter that has the iPhone and at school most kids now seems to have moved on to Android. Why? Apple is losing it cool because now the parents have the iPhone. At work we are now calling the iPhone, the Granny Phone.

Mortarm
on Feb 1, 2013

Interesting how Apple starts a market, But eventually is outdone by someone else.

Jago
on Feb 2, 2013

...if by "outdone" you mean, continues to make more money than anyone else in the business..... :-)

trivor
on Feb 2, 2013

Actually, the Nexus 7 was the first quality Android device with an equally 1st rate version of Android (Jelly Bean 4.1) and it's a superb value at $199 for 16 GB, $249 for 32 GB, and no contract 3G version for $299. The Nexus 7 is my first tablet and use it almost every day around the house.

jeffsters
on Feb 2, 2013

This was a terrible report that used shipments into the channel and guesses t sales that other data, such as web OS use, simply doesn't support. Android based web traffic is on the decline while iOS is on the rise. If IDC's "guesstimates" are correct I have no idea what these people are doing with their Android tablets!

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