How Long Does It Take to Build a Mobile App?

"How long will it take?" is the first question almost every client asks. It's also the question that gets the most dishonest answers. "It depends" is technically correct but practically useless. So here's an actual breakdown, based on real projects, of how long mobile app development takes — and why.
The Short Answer: 2 to 9 Months
A simple mobile app with a focused feature set takes roughly 2–4 months from kickoff to App Store submission. A mid-complexity app with multiple user roles and backend integrations takes 4–6 months. A complex platform — marketplace, real-time features, custom hardware integrations — takes 6–9 months or more. Those ranges assume a professional team working full-time. A solo freelancer working part-time on the same project could easily triple those estimates.
What Happens in Each Phase
Discovery and scoping (1–3 weeks): Before any design or code starts, a professional team defines exactly what's being built. This means user stories, technical architecture decisions, and a project plan. Skipping this is how projects balloon from 3 months to 8.
UI/UX design (2–5 weeks): Wireframes, user flows, and high-fidelity mockups in Figma. For most apps, every screen needs to be designed before development begins. Complex apps with many unique screens take longer. Apps reusing a consistent component library move faster.
Frontend development (4–12 weeks): Building the screens, navigation, animations, and all client-side logic. Timeline here depends heavily on screen count and interaction complexity. A 10-screen app with standard navigation is very different from a 40-screen app with custom gestures and offline sync.
Backend development (3–10 weeks): Building the API, database schema, authentication system, and third-party integrations. This often runs in parallel with frontend development, but dependencies between the two create coordination overhead that adds time.

QA and testing (2–4 weeks): Systematic bug finding across devices, OS versions, edge cases, and integration points. This phase consistently gets underestimated. Rushing QA is the most reliable way to launch with embarrassing bugs that cost you early users.
App Store submission and review (1–2 weeks): Apple's review process takes 1–3 days on average but can take longer if the app is flagged for review. Google Play is faster, typically 1–3 days. First-time submissions are almost always rejected for something minor — plan for at least one revision cycle.
Native vs Cross-Platform: Does It Affect Timeline?
Yes, significantly. Building separate native apps for iOS (Swift) and Android (Kotlin) roughly doubles frontend development time, since you're maintaining two codebases. Cross-platform frameworks like React Native or Flutter let one team build for both platforms simultaneously, reducing development time by 30–50% compared to dual native builds. At TRAVLRD, we default to cross-platform for most clients because the performance difference is negligible for the vast majority of use cases.
The Real Reasons Projects Take Longer Than Planned
In our experience, the most common causes of timeline overruns are not technical — they're process failures. Scope creep mid-project ("can we also add...") is responsible for more delays than any technical problem. Slow client feedback cycles — when a design review that should take 2 days takes 2 weeks — compound throughout the project. And unclear requirements at kickoff mean developers make assumptions that have to be undone later.
A well-run project with clear requirements, fast feedback loops, and a no-scope-creep discipline can often be delivered 20–30% faster than the same project run poorly. Process quality is a timeline multiplier.
Get a Realistic Timeline for Your App
At TRAVLRD, we give every client a milestone-based project plan before development begins — not a vague estimate, but a week-by-week breakdown of what gets built when. If you want to know how long your specific app would take, start with a free discovery call and we'll map it out in detail.
About the author

I'm Mate Karolyi, the founder and CEO of TRAVLRD. My days are largely filled with strategic business development and sales tasks, as well as project management. Alongside my passion for the startup world, I have a love for award-winning web design, which is why I also serve as a jury member for the Top Design King Award. In my free time, I enjoy playing chess, playing guitar, or windsurfing.
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