Scarlet Antirevoke Install Ipa Files With Sca Free |top| May 2026
Scarlet AntiRevoke — Install .ipa Files with SCA Free
Scarlet AntiRevoke is a lightweight tool that helps iOS users keep sideloaded apps running without frequent certificate revocations. This guide explains how to install .ipa files using the free SCA (Scarlet Community Assistant) workflow and keep them functional with AntiRevoke protections.
2. SCA says "Failed to Sign IPA"
- Cause: The IPA is corrupted, encrypted, or requires entitlements not available in the enterprise cert.
- Fix: Use a different IPA source. Decrypt the IPA yourself using a jailbroken device or a tool like "CrackerXI+."
Prerequisites:
- An iOS device (iPhone/iPad) running iOS 14–17 (some features broken on iOS 18 beta).
- Wi-Fi connection (to install the anti-revoke DNS profile).
- A valid source for IPA files (ensure they are malware-free).
Step 4: Maintain the Installation
- Keep Scarlet’s anti-revoke enabled at all times.
- Don’t delete the VPN/DNS profile if the method uses one.
- If the app stops opening, re-run anti-revoke in Scarlet or reinstall the IPA.
- Avoid updating iOS – Apple often patches these methods.
Key Features of Scarlet:
- No PC Required: Installs directly from the web via a mobile provisioning profile.
- App Library: Offers a built-in catalog of tweaked apps (Spotify++, YouTube++, etc.).
- IPA Signer: Allows you to import your own IPA files from the web.
- Anti-Revoke Integration: This is where the magic happens.
Tips and best practices
- Keep backups of .ipa files and any provisioning profiles used.
- Use local signing when possible to avoid sending credentials to third-party services.
- Update Scarlet and SCA Free helpers when new versions are released to maintain compatibility with iOS updates.
- If you use a free Apple ID for signing, note that free provisioning profiles may expire every 7 days — Scarlet can mitigate some issues but you may need to re-sign periodically.