How to open .IPA files on Mac
To open .IPA files on Mac, if you want to inspect contents: open the .ipa with Archive Utility (or rename .ipa to .zip, then double-click to extract).
Step-by-step instructions
- If you want to inspect contents: open the .ipa with Archive Utility (or rename .ipa to .zip, then double-click to extract).
- In the extracted folder, open Payload/<AppName>.app to view the app bundle contents (resources, metadata).
Common issues
“Windows can’t open this file” / it opens in the wrong app
An .ipa is an archive and is not meant to be opened like a document. If the system doesn’t associate it with an archive tool, double-click may fail or open an unrelated program.
- Open it with an archive extractor (e.g., 7-Zip) or rename the file from .ipa to .zip and extract.
- After extracting, look for Payload/<AppName>.app to confirm it’s a valid iOS app package.
Extraction fails or the contents don’t look like an iOS app (missing Payload/*.app)
The file may be corrupted, incomplete, or not actually an iOS app package despite the .ipa extension. A typical IPA has a Payload directory containing an .app bundle.
- Try re-downloading or re-copying the .ipa (corruption during transfer is common for large archives).
- Extract with a different ZIP tool and verify the presence of Payload/<AppName>.app.
Trying to install an .ipa on an iPhone/iPad doesn’t work
iOS app installation is controlled by Apple’s app distribution mechanisms; simply “opening” an .ipa in Files is not a general-purpose installation method.
- Use the publisher’s intended distribution/testing method instead of trying to open the file directly on-device.
- If your goal is just to inspect the package, extract it on a desktop OS as a ZIP archive.
Security note
An .ipa is an app package; installing apps from untrusted sources can be risky because it ultimately delivers executable code for iOS/iPadOS.