How to open .APKS files on Linux
To open .APKS files on Linux, to inspect/extract: use a ZIP-capable archive manager to open the .apks and extract its contents (it is ZIP-based).
Step-by-step instructions
- To inspect/extract: use a ZIP-capable archive manager to open the .apks and extract its contents (it is ZIP-based).
- To install on Android: move the .apks to your Android device and install using a split-APK installer (e.g., SAI).
Common issues
Tapping the .apks file doesn’t install the app
.apks is an APK set archive (multiple APKs), not a single APK that Android’s package installer can always handle directly.
- Install and use a split-APK installer that supports APK sets (for example, SAI) and open the .apks from there.
- If you only need files inside, extract the .apks with a ZIP/archive tool and review the contained APKs.
Windows/macOS shows it as an unknown file type
.apks is not as universally registered as .zip; your system may not associate it with an archive utility even though it is ZIP-based.
- Open it explicitly from your archive tool (e.g., use the tool’s File > Open).
- Alternatively, configure your archive tool as the default for .apks, or extract by treating it as a ZIP-based archive.
Extraction works, but there are many APKs and you’re not sure which one to use
APKS commonly contains split APK components meant to be installed together; choosing only one APK may fail or produce an incomplete install.
- Prefer installing the original .apks with a split-APK installer (e.g., SAI) so all required splits are installed together.
- If using developer tooling, generate/install a device-appropriate set using bundletool workflows described by Android Developers.
Security note
Treat .apks as potentially untrusted software: it usually contains APKs, which are application packages that can install apps on Android.