Apple has regained ground in the US smartphone market with its latest iPhone release, a survey shows.
The California giant captured 41.8 per cent of smartphone sales in the final three months of 2013, up from 40.6 per cent in the three months to September, the comScore survey showed.
The gains came following the September release of the iPhone 5S and 5C models in the US and other world markets.
Apple remained ahead of Samsung in the US market, but the South Korean electronics giant also increased its share to 26.1 per cent from 24.9 per cent in the prior three months, comScore said.
Motorola, the Google-owned maker which is being sold to China's Lenovo under a deal announced last week, had a 6.7 per cent market share, compared to 6.8 per cent in the previous three-month period, the survey showed.
South Korea's LG was a close fourth with 6.6 per cent and Taiwan's HTC fifth with 5.7 per cent, comScore said.
Even though the iPhone was popular among Americans, the Android platform still held a majority with 51.5 per cent of smartphone subscribers, according to the survey, a dip of 0.3 points.
Apple's iOS, which is only used on iPhones, was second with 41.8 per cent.
Microsoft's Windows Phone stumbled in the third quarter, losing 0.2 percentage points for a 3.1 per cent share, behind BlackBerry's 3.4 per cent.
A separate survey last week by Strategy Analytics indicated that the Google Android system was used on 78.9 per cent of smartphones sold globally in 2013, while Apple's global market share slipped to 15.5 per cent.

