Tminus is an AI-powered service that handles the entire iOS App Store submission workflow for developers. It targets indie devs and AI builders who can build an app quickly but get stuck on the publishing process, turning weeks of paperwork into a hands-off experience.
The platform generates App Store metadata and screenshots automatically, submits the binary, and monitors review status. If Apple rejects the build—about one in three first submissions—Tminus reads the reviewer notes, identifies the specific violation, corrects the metadata or screenshots, and resubmits without human intervention. It works with apps created in Rork, Cursor, Lovable, Bolt, or Xcode, so teams are not locked to a single builder.
Users upload a build through Tminus; the system then creates the required promotional text, keywords, and screenshot sets, files the submission, and keeps the developer informed. When a rejection arrives, an internal agent parses the reason, applies the necessary changes, and pushes a new version back to Apple, looping until approval.
By automating rejection handling and metadata generation, Tminus lets developers focus on product instead of App Store bureaucracy. The service is positioned as an affordable layer that sits alongside existing no-code or AI tools rather than replacing them.
Tminus is aimed at indie iOS developers, weekend builders, and teams using vibe-coding tools who want to ship fast without learning Apple’s review guidelines or hiring external help.
Key Features
- •Agentic rejection handling: when Apple rejects a build, Tminus reads the reviewer notes, identifies the violation, corrects metadata or screenshots, and resubmits automatically.
- •Platform-agnostic integration: works with apps built in Rork, Cursor, Lovable, Bolt, or native Xcode projects, so developers keep their preferred toolchain.
- •Automatic metadata generation: creates App Store promotional text, keywords, and screenshot sets from the uploaded build, eliminating manual paperwork.
- •Continuous resubmission loop: keeps iterating on fixes until Apple approves, reducing time-to-market for indie developers.
- •Affordable pricing tier: plans start at $30 per month, positioned as a lower-cost alternative to services that begin around $200 per month.