Retrotransposon-based molecular markers are a powerful tool for mapping and diversity studies. The scarcity of retrotransposon long terminal repeat (LTR) sequences limits the application of retrotransposon-based molecular marker systems. Here, we isolated two novel complete Ty1-copia retrotransposons (CTcrm1 and CTcrm2) in apple using a genome walking strategy. The CTcrm retrotransposons are nearly 5 kb long, and they have all the features of Ty1-copia retrotransposons. The differences in gene organization and nucleotide sequence length between the CTcrm retrotransposons and other reported complete retrotransposons in apple showed that CTcrm1 and CTcrm2 are the first two distinct complete Ty1-copia retrotransposons in the apple genome. To investigate the potential utility of the two retrotransposons as molecular markers, primers complementary to the CTcrm LTRs were designed to develop sequence-specific amplification polymorphism markers for discriminating bud sports of Fuji apple. Multiple polymorphisms corresponding to CTcrm1 and CTcrm2 were detected and could easily be used to discriminate bud sports from their Fuji progenitor, as well as from each other.