Apple has quietly removed the older free versions of its Pages, Numbers, and Keynote apps from the Mac App Store, leaving only the newer editions that tie into its Creator Studio subscription service. The change simplifies the lineup but also nudges users toward paid features, marking another small step in Apple’s gradual shift of productivity software toward a subscription model.
The updated apps remain free to download and use for core tasks. Everything that worked in the previous standalone versions still works here. What has changed is the persistent prompting inside the apps to subscribe to Creator Studio for extras such as additional templates and AI-powered tools. On iOS and iPadOS, Apple made a similar transition when Creator Studio launched. On the Mac, it had kept both old and new versions available side by side until now.
If you already downloaded the earlier releases of Pages, Numbers, or Keynote, you can still find and reinstall them from your purchase history by clicking your profile picture in the lower-left corner of the App Store. Those legacy copies will not receive any future updates, however, leaving them increasingly out of step with macOS as time passes.
The paid professional apps—Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, and the acquired Pixelmator Pro—continue to appear in both their traditional one-time purchase form and as Creator Studio-compatible versions. This split approach shows Apple is not yet forcing every user into subscriptions, but the direction for the free office suite is clear.
The move fits a broader pattern across the tech industry. Companies that once relied on upfront software sales have increasingly turned to recurring revenue streams, citing the need to fund ongoing development and cloud services. For users, it creates a familiar tension: the basic experience stays accessible, yet meaningful enhancements sit behind a paywall that can feel nagging over time. Apple’s implementation here is relatively gentle compared with some competitors, but the intent is unmistakable.
For most everyday tasks—writing documents, building spreadsheets, or creating presentations—the free Creator Studio versions of Pages, Numbers, and Keynote should still suffice without issue. The subscription only becomes relevant if you want the newer AI features or expanded template libraries. That said, the removal of the old apps removes choice for new users who might prefer a cleaner, one-time experience without any subscription prompts.
As macOS continues to evolve, these legacy apps will eventually feel dated. Apple appears to be betting that the convenience of seamless updates and the promise of AI enhancements will outweigh any irritation caused by the occasional upgrade prompt. Whether that calculation holds will depend on how aggressively the company expands Creator Studio’s paid offerings in the coming years.
