Google just ran out of courtrooms. On July 2, the European Court of Justice dismissed the tech giant’s final appeal against a €4.1 billion ($4.7 billion) antitrust fine, ending an eight-year legal battle that began when the European Commission first brought the hammer down in 2018.
The ruling makes this the largest antitrust penalty the EU has ever imposed that is now definitively enforceable. Every possible appeal has been exhausted, and Google’s legal options are officially zero.
What Google actually did
The case centers on Android, Google’s mobile operating system that powers the vast majority of smartphones worldwide. The European Commission determined back in 2018 that Google had abused its dominant position by requiring device manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Chrome as a condition for using Android.
In English: if Samsung or any other phonemaker wanted to ship devices running Android, they had to bundle Google’s apps whether they wanted to or not. Regulators argued this effectively locked out competing search engines and browsers from the most valuable real estate in tech, your phone’s home screen.
Google’s defense was straightforward, if somewhat predictable. The company maintained that Android actually fosters competition and consumer choice, pointing to the open-source nature of the operating system. Regulators were not persuaded.
The original fine set by the Commission in July 2018 was €4.34 billion. The General Court reduced that figure to €4.1 billion in 2022. Google then took the case to the ECJ, the EU’s highest court, hoping for a different outcome. It did not get one.
The ECJ’s dismissal confirms both the General Court’s 2022 ruling and the Commission’s underlying finding that Google’s practices were anti-competitive.
The bigger regulatory picture
This case didn’t happen in a vacuum. It’s one of several antitrust actions the European Commission has pursued against Google, and the conclusion of this particular saga doesn’t mean the company is out of regulatory crosshairs. Other antitrust issues involving Google remain unresolved in the EU.
The eight-year timeline is worth noting. The Commission’s initial decision came in 2018. The General Court’s intermediate ruling arrived in 2022. The ECJ’s final word dropped in 2026. The EU waited, and it won.
What this means for investors
For Alphabet shareholders, the financial impact of the fine itself is manageable. The more important question is whether this ruling triggers behavioral changes that affect future earnings. If Google is forced to meaningfully alter how Android operates in Europe, giving manufacturers more freedom to pre-install competing apps and search engines, that could erode the company’s dominance in mobile search over time.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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