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Make your app easier to find in Microsoft Store search

✦ Summarize this article for me

Many customers discover apps and games by searching the Microsoft Store. When your Store listing is clear, accurate, and complete, search can connect your app with the customers looking for what it does. This article explains how Store search works and how to make your app easier to find.

How Store search works

When a customer searches the Microsoft Store, results are based on a combination of factors, including:

An accurate, high-quality listing helps the Store understand your app and show it to the customers most likely to want it. Search continues to evolve, so the most reliable approach is an accurate listing and a great app experience rather than tactics aimed at ranking.

ⓘ Note
Search is designed to connect customers with the apps most relevant to them. Focus on describing your app accurately and delivering a great experience rather than optimizing for ranking.

The parts of your listing that search uses

Each part of your Store listing plays a role. Fill them in accurately and completely:

Listing elementWhat it's forBest practice
App nameYour app's identity in resultsUse your app's real, unique name. Don't add extra keywords or descriptive text to it.
DescriptionExplains what your app doesLead with your value; describe real features in the words customers use.
Search terms (up to 7)Extra terms customers might search that aren't already in your name or descriptionAdd specific, relevant terms only — see below.
Category (and subcategory)Browsing and filteringChoose the category that most accurately represents your app.
Screenshots and assetsHelp customers decide to installShow your app's real experience clearly.

Choose effective search terms

In the search terms field, add words or phrases customers might use to find an app like yours that aren't already in your app name or description. Per Microsoft Store Policy 10.1.3, search terms must:

⚠ Important · Don't use competitor or third-party names
Using another app's name or a brand or trademark you don't own — in your search terms, name, or description — isn't allowed and may cause your submission to fail certification. Per Policy 10.1.1, your metadata must not be the same as another product's or mislead customers about your app's relationship to other products; per Policy 11.2, don't use third-party names, logos, or trademarks without permission. Describe what your app does, not what other apps are called.
✓ Tip
Spend your seven terms on specific, functional phrases customers actually type (for example, "pomodoro timer", "merge PDF", "photo restore") — and don't waste them repeating words already in your app name or description.

Describe your app in your customers' words

Customers search using everyday language. Use the words they are likely to type when looking for an app like yours.

What to avoid

Some tactics don't improve discoverability and can work against you or cause your submission to be flagged during certification:

⚠ Important
Keep your listing accurate and relevant to your app. See the Microsoft Store Policies (10.1 Distinct Function & Value; Accurate Representation) for the full requirements.
✓ Tip
If your app genuinely gained a new capability, describe that feature in your listing so customers searching for it can find you. Add only features your app actually has.

Complete and localize your listing

Earn positive ratings and keep your app healthy

Because customer engagement is part of how search works, the experience you deliver matters:

Monitor your search performance

Use the search analytics in Partner Center to understand how customers find and install your app:

Use these insights to refine your description and search terms over time — always keeping them accurate to what your app does.

For more info, see Analyze your app's performance.