After eight years of judicial fights across Europe, Google has finally lost. On Thursday, Europe’s top court dismissed Alphabet’s Google’s final appeal against the European Commission’s €4.1 billion antitrust penalties for using its Android mobile operating system to restrict rivals, the largest antitrust fine ever issued by European authorities on a digital corporation. The Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the European Union’s decision is legally binding and signals the end of Google’s attempts to reverse or reduce the penalty.
The ruling is seen as likely to boost Europe’s crackdown on Big Tech. “The appeal brought by Google LLC and Alphabet Inc. is dismissed in its entirety,” the court said in a statement. The decision is a significant victory for the European Commission and sends a clear signal to technology companies operating in the EU that regulators will pursue antitrust violations all the way through the court system.
“Alphabet’s Google lost its fight against a record fine imposed by EU antitrust regulators eight years ago for using its Android mobile operating system to block rivals, a court ruling likely to boost Europe’s crackdown on Big Tech.”~Reuters
What Google Actually Did And Why Brussels Acted In 2018:
The fine traces back to a European Commission investigation that concluded in July 2018. The Commission found that Google had engaged in three specific anti-competitive practices tied to Android: requiring device manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and the Chrome browser on their devices as a condition of licensing the Google Play app store, making payments to manufacturers and mobile network operators contingent on exclusively pre-installing Google Search on their devices, and preventing manufacturers who wanted to pre-install Google apps from selling any devices running alternative Android-based operating systems.
The Commission’s original penalty was €4.34 billion. A lower EU tribunal subsequently trimmed that figure to €4.1 billion in 2022 after Google’s first challenge — a partial win for the company that came with no vindication on the substance of the conduct. Google then took the case to the Court of Justice, Europe’s highest legal authority. On July 2, 2026, that court sided comprehensively with the regulator.
“Google lost its final appeal in the EU against the record €4.1 billion antitrust fine over its Android practices. ‘The decision represents the end of the European Commission’s first stage battle with Big Tech,’ says legal expert Alex Haffner of Fladgate.”~CNBC
€11 Billion In EU Fines And More Coming Under The Digital Markets Act:
Thursday’s decision does not signal the end of Google’s regulatory issues in Europe; rather, it marks the end of the first chapter. Google has received close to €11 billion in EU fines over the last decade for multiple antitrust violations. The €2.42 billion shopping comparison fine was imposed in 2017, followed by the Android fine in 2018, and a €1.49 billion fine for restrictive acts in online advertising brokerage in 2019. Last year, the Commission fined Google €2.95 billion for anticompetitive activities in its advertising technology business.
The loss of the shopping comparison case in earlier proceedings had already triggered a wave of private damages lawsuits. A Swedish court ordered Google to pay about $1.5 billion in damages to PriceRunner, the price comparison business now owned by Klarna, on Wednesday just one day before the Android fine ruling landed. Thursday’s outcome is expected to generate similar private litigation, with companies that were harmed by Google’s Android-era practices now having a final, unappealable court ruling on which to base their damage claims.
Although antitrust is still a focus for the Commission, the regulator is now looking at the practices of big technology firms under the sweeping Digital Markets Act and Digital Services Act, with companies like Apple and Meta also under scrutiny. For Google, more fines look likely in the near future for allegedly favouring its own services and products in search results and for practices related to its app store both of which fall under the Digital Markets Act.
“Google lost its long-running fight against a €4.1 billion ($4.7 billion) European Union antitrust fine after the bloc’s top judges said regulators were right to punish the US giant for abusing Android’s market power. The ruling is legally binding and final.”~Bloomberg
What It Means For Big Tech And Why The Amount Is Deceptive:
While the €4.1 billion fine makes headlines, it represents less than 3% of Alphabet’s yearly earnings – a statistic that critics of EU antitrust enforcement have long used to argue that the penalties are not truly deterrent. The more significant feature of Thursday’s decision is what it enables: a stream of private damages lawsuits from firms, publishers, and competitors across EU member states, who can now use an unappealable court finding of illegal conduct to back up their claims.
The verdict also upholds the European Commission’s long-term strategy of pursuing large platform companies using competition law, even if the regulatory tools have switched to the Digital Markets Act. According to one legal expert, the verdict concludes the “first stage” of the Commission’s war with Big Tech, which was based on classic competition law. The second step, based on the DMA’s ex-ante responsibilities for designated gatekeepers, is already well underway, with current DMA investigations into Google, Apple, Meta, and Amazon, each with their own separate punishment scheme.




