Glossary
SKAN Postback Window

What is a SKAN Postback Window?
A SKAN Postback Window is a fixed time frame in Apple’s SKAdNetwork where user behavior is measured and encoded into a conversion value — before Apple sends the postback that attributes the install to an ad.
Instead of sending real-time event data, SKAN waits for one of these windows to end, adds a delay, and then sends a privacy-safe postback to the ad network or MMP.
Each window gives you a limited chance to capture user behavior and assign value.
How does it work?
SKAN 4.0 introduced three postback windows:
0–2 days
3–7 days
8–35 days
You can choose to lock a window early (via lockWindow = true) to trigger a postback sooner. Otherwise, SKAN will wait until the window naturally closes and apply a random delay to protect user privacy.
Each postback contains:
A conversion value (coarse or fine)
A source identifier (ad campaign metadata)
A postback number (1, 2, or 3 — depending on the window)
A delayed timestamp range, not exact timing
Only one postback is sent per window — and no updates can happen once it’s triggered.
Why it matters
Understanding postback windows is essential for:
Mapping key user actions (like trial start or purchase) to the right time frame
Designing onboarding and paywall flows that fit within attribution windows
Maximizing signal in a system with limited data
Managing optimization cycles (since postbacks are delayed)
The SKAN postback window defines how and when your campaigns get credit — and how much visibility you have into user value over time.
Optimizing for it is the key to making SKAN work for performance.
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© 2025 Design and developed by Appstack

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© 2025 Design and developed by Appstack

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© 2025 Design and developed by Appstack
