F-Droid was founded by
Ciaran Gultnieks in 2010. The client was forked from
Aptoide's source code. The project was initially run by the English nonprofit F-Droid Limited. and was being shut down, according to spokesman Hans-Cristoph Steiner. In a 2014 interview for
Free Software Foundation, Gultnieks said he was inspired to launch F-Droid because of "lock-down, lock-in and general nefarious behavior from software" on phones. From 2010 to 2015, F-Droid used the
AGPL-licensed
Gitorious repository system for development. In 2015, it transitioned to
proprietary licensed
GitLab when Gitorious was acquired by GitLab. According to Daniel Marti, Former F-Droid Developer, in 2013, removal of
AdAway from the Google Play Store caused a spike in searches and downloads of F-Droid, and he estimated there were 30 to 40 thousand users.
Replicant, a fully free software Android operating system, previously used F-Droid as its default and recommended app store. In 2016, the Replicant project determined F-Droid did not comply with
GNU Free System Distribution Guidelines, on the grounds that some of the software it offers promotes or depends on non-free software. Replicant asked for assistance correcting it, but progress stalled. In June 2022, Replicant announced they had removed F-Droid.
Guardian Project, a suite of free and secure Android applications, started running their own F-Droid repository in early 2012. In 2012,
Free Software Foundation Europe featured F-Droid in their
Free Your Android! campaign to raise awareness of the privacy and security risks of
proprietary software. In 2014, F-Droid was chosen as part of the
GNU Project's
GNU a Day initiative during their 30th anniversary to encourage more use of free software. In January 2016, Hans-Christoph Steiner, a developer for Calyx Institute,
Debian, F-Droid, and Guardian Project, said F-Droid was focusing on issues like security, building with Debian, reproducible builds, software requiring trust of as few people as possible, transparency, user privacy, non-internet distribution of apps, block avoidance, and media distribution. In March 2016, F-Droid partnered with the Guardian Project and
CopperheadOS with the goal of creating, "a solution that can be verifiably trusted from the operating system, through the network and network services, all the way up to the app stores and apps themselves". Follow-on project
GrapheneOS does not include F-Droid, and is developing their own app distribution method for "higher robustness and security". On 16 July 2019, the project published a "Public Statement on Neutrality of Free Software". This statement was issued to address the project's failure to prevent "oppression or harassment ... at its communication channels, including its forum", controversy surrounding
alt-tech social media website
Gab, and to explain how
Fediverse client Tusky blocking access to it, while client Fedilab allowed its users to choose, was consistent with their principles. Action was considered against several applications, including
Purism's
Librem One, to exclude them for allowing access to sites such as Gab or spinster.xyz. According to Ankush Das writing for ItsFoss.com in 2021, F-Droid is known for hosting open-source apps such as
Element or Tusky (later reinstated) that have been removed from Google Play Store. In 24 February 2026, an
open letter was created on the F-Droid website in response to an announcement by Google stating their intent to require all apps to be "registered by verified developers in order to be installed on certified Android devices" by September 2026. Alongside this, a banner providing notice and linking to
Keep Android Open was instated across the entire website around the same time. == Scope of project ==