TL; DR
- Apple now blocks AirDropped copies of Final Cut Pro, showing a warning that no valid App Store purchase is linked and redirecting users to the App Store.
- New AirDropped installs fail on macOS Sequoia and later due to stricter receipt and entitlement checks, while older, already-licensed installs continue to work.
- Apple is pushing its Creator Studio subscription as the alternative, bundling Final Cut Pro with other pro apps starting at ₹199 per month for students in India.
Apple has shut down a long-standing workaround that allowed users to install Final Cut Pro by AirDropping the app from another Mac, including Apple Store demo units. Users attempting this now see a system warning stating that no valid App Store purchase was found, instructing them to delete the app and download it again from the Mac App Store.
The app bundle still transfers successfully, but macOS blocks it at launch. The issue mainly affects macOS Sequoia (15.x) and Tahoe (26.x) versions, where Apple enforces stricter checks for App Store receipts and app entitlements tied to an Apple ID. Without those, Final Cut Pro refuses to install.
Some reports indicate that older AirDropped installations made before these changes can still function, as long as they were previously activated and linked to a valid license. Those copies continue to receive updates and run normally. The restriction applies specifically to new transfers.
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This change appears tied to Apple tightening Gatekeeper and app verification rules in recent macOS releases. This removes many of the previous override options and places more emphasis on software origin and licensing, making sideloaded App Store apps far harder to use.
At the same time, Apple is promoting its Creator Studio subscription, introduced a few weeks ago. The bundle includes Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, Pixelmator Pro, MainStage, and additional AI features across Apple’s productivity apps. In India, the plan costs ₹399 per month or ₹3,999 per year, with a discounted ₹199 per month rate for students and educators. New Mac and iPad buyers also get a three-month free trial.

For users affected by the block, the only reliable options now are downloading Final Cut Pro directly from the App Store with a valid purchase or switching to the Creator Studio subscription.
ALSO READ: Apple’s New ₹399 ‘Creator Studio’ Bundle Makes It Hard to Justify an Adobe Subscription

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