How to regain access to a locked Apple Account used for FCP purchases?

My Apple ID that was used to purchase FCP has been locked. This is a separate Apple ID I use for purchases on my company Macs. Not a business account, just a regular AppleID. This is the first time I've ever had an issue with an Apple ID. I tried the account re-activation request but this morning received a very unhelpful email from a no-reply address saying, "We’ve reviewed your request, and access to your account (redacted) has been denied." No explanation or guidance for additional help. I'm hoping others here who have separate AppleIDs for company FCP purchases can help. I want to download FCP 11.2 before the 12.0 version drops so any support numbers, support email addresses, or help would be greatly appreciated.


[Re-Titled by Moderator]

Original Title: AppleID that purchased FCP

Posted on Jan 15, 2026 9:52 AM

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12 replies

Jan 15, 2026 10:01 AM in response to terryb

When Apple locks an Apple Account (formerly known as Apple ID) it’s usually for suspected fraud. It’s almost impossible to get Apple to unlock it as you have discovered by their response.


If your Apple Account is locked, not active, or disabled - Apple Support


Read this article and shudder at the thought


https://appleinsider.com/articles/25/12/13/locked-out-how-a-gift-card-purchase-destroyed-an-apple-account

Jan 15, 2026 10:44 AM in response to terryb

According to various posts, Apple may permanently lock accounts for reasons (very broadly outlined in section VII-B of Legal - iCloud - Apple ). If it isn’t apparent, contact Apple and ask if that is the situation, but don’t expect them to tell you why. Something is taking place that Apple is interpreting as account misuse. You will have to see if your activities could be construed—rightly or wrongly—as meeting any of Apple's conditions in the legal article.


We're not allowed to speculate as to reasons why Apple might have locked the account but you may wish to consider your statements "Not a business account, just a regular AppleID." and "my company Macs".


Unfortunately the loss of an account can also entail loss of access to equipment. In this situation Apple can completely reset a device if a person can provide sufficient evidence of valid ownership. Read the requirements and steps for an Activation Lock support request at: https://al-support.apple.com/#/additional-support and links at the bottom right for the type of service requested. Apple says they may require "proof of purchase documentation” and that you need “proof of ownership documentation”, but does not detail what currently constitutes proof other than it “must include the product serial number, IMEI or MEID.” User reports on this community indicate that typically Apple will ONLY accept an original receipt issued by Apple or an Apple Authorized Reseller. Presumably this is the only kind Apple can authenticate against fraud since Apple is not involved in third party sales. Apple recommends that you "Keep your receipt after you buy an Apple device" --> Keep your receipt after you buy an Apple device - Apple Support

If Apple resets the device this will give you access to the device but won't restore access to the account used to lock it. There is nothing that can be done to expedite an Activation Lock request.




Jan 15, 2026 5:25 PM in response to terryb

Just hung up from an hour+ conversation with a very nice support person, and we tried to reset the password and submit another unlock request but the end result was there's nothing he could do. He didn't know why the account was locked and could only sympathize with the inadequacy of the help available to me. The only *potential* solution was to try https://al-support.apple.com/#/be/agreement and submit proof of purchase of a production Mac where that Apple ID was used, which he said *might* provide an unlock for the Apple ID. But, if the Apple ID is unlocked, this Mac would have all its data erased and restoring from a backup would re-lock the Apple ID! Really? If I want access to the Apple software I purchased, I must lose years of production project data from that Mac? How can this possibly be true?


I'm flabbergasted and stunned. As an Apple user and evangelist since 1986 I'm incredibly unhappy and wanted to share this with other users here.


My question above still stands: If using a second Apple ID is not the way to separate purchases between personal and company, how should it be done? I genuinely need some guidance here because I don't ever want this to happen again.

EDIT: Just saw your response Limnos. Thank you, I will have a look.

Jan 15, 2026 12:24 PM in response to terryb

I don't see where it says it couldn't be escalated to a human. In fact it does mention talking with Apple staff, not that they will tell you much. Apple is very secretive about its anti-fraud and abuse measures, even to the extent that they will not tell you anything much about closing an account. This is frustrating I know, but it also understandable because the more details they provide then the more the deliberate abusers (they have no idea of knowing if what you did was intentional or not) learn about what measures they need to circumvent.




Jan 15, 2026 5:58 PM in response to terryb

Uh, that support person is giving you some incorrect information in places, or you misunderstood what they were advising.


That is the page for Activation Lock removal request service (and that URL you provided me renders it in Russian, I think). That will wipe the device entirely and let you use the device with a new account. As I said before, it will not restore the account. I also think if you try to restore a wiped device with a backup made when it had a now-locked account on it, you will find the device gets locked again. I don't know how many times Apple will reset it for you if you keep on doing that, so I wouldn't even try to start with.


The account is locked, so basically the old account and everything done with it is history except for things kept outside the account. At least the equipment can still be used if you can get Apple to reset it for use as a brand new piece of equipment with a brand new account.


Sorry to hear this happened. Scammers, thieves, abusers and the populace's desire to use devices for things requiring security are forcing tech people to introduce pretty strict measures. Apple has pretty rigid ways of handling this, though I can understand that with millions (if not billions) of accounts it is just easiest to stick to strict methods of handling suspicious account use.


I personally use my account for very little. I only have one purchased app, which I purchased directly from the vendor. Apple has never seen my credit card. I have no balance in my account. The only apps I use on my iPhone are entirely free ones. I only use the 5GB free iCloud which has nothing that isn't already on my external hard drive. So basically if I lost my account it would be a nuisance but not catastrophic.

Jan 15, 2026 10:59 AM in response to lkrupp

Jeez, the AppleInsider article is shocking. An Apple dev of 25 years has his primary account locked and can't get it resolved because it won't be escalated to a human? That's horrible customer service. My accounts are only ~10 years old and it's the one used for company Mac purchases, not my primary personal one. Ugh, I'm not looking forward to trying to resolve this.

Jan 15, 2026 2:44 PM in response to Limnos

Limnos, I re-read your reply and wanted to clarify the statement about "my company Macs." This is a company I own (since 1996) and I own and control the two Macs used for production. Maybe you can provide some guidance as to how someone in my situation should think about Apple IDs (which I understand are now called Apple Accounts but called Apple IDs when they were created a decade+ ago).


In 2015 or so I wanted to keep purchases of FCP and a few other production apps separate from my primary Apple ID thinking it might be easier for my business partner to be able to update software without needing access to my primary Apple ID, so I created a second Apple ID using an email alias that forwards to my primary email. I purchased FCP and a few more apps with this Apple ID. For the last ~10 years, whenever I wanted to update the apps on the production Mac, I logged into the AppStore as that second Apple ID, updated, then signed out. The two production Macs are not left logged into the AppStore. As I said, I own and control both.


If this is not a proper way to separate some purchases, what should be done instead? Thanks for your help.

Jan 15, 2026 6:41 PM in response to Limnos

The Activation Lock page (which appears correctly in english for me) was the support person's last suggestion as to what *might* get the Apple ID unlocked. This Apple ID was never used to activate hardware, it was only created to purchase Apple's Final Cut Pro, Motion, and a handful of 3rd party apps as a (what I thought at the time 10 years ago) smart way to keep personal purchases separate from those for my small business of 3 people.


The business links you provided all seem to be geared for large companies and aren't really applicable to very small organizations. So, do you know where I can find guidance on how to keep app purchases separate for a small business? I thought a second Apple ID was the correct way, but now that it looks like Apple has locked the Apple ID and I can no longer update what I purchased from them, essentially forcing me to pay them for the software again, I really don't want this to happen in the future.

Jan 15, 2026 7:22 PM in response to terryb

I have seen hundreds of activation lock issues posted on this forum but not a single one saying it got an account working again. The account is locked. If you reload your computer with things referring to the account then they will connect with Apple's servers which will say no-go because it knows the account is locked. It's like you saying you have a credit card for an account that no longer exists. You can try using the card but once the vendor contacts the card company they will be told the account is closed. You're fortunate the equipment wasn't using the account that purchased the software (in fact, that is something non-standard…; that and the fact that you had multiple versions running?)


I have no idea how Apple works behind the scenes but you were probably doing something that looked suspicious to Apple even if it was above board. Unfortunately their system is pretty unforgiving but that's the way it is now.


One of the links in the link I provided has a way to contact Apple's business department. I would start there.

How to regain access to a locked Apple Account used for FCP purchases?

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