The Google Android antitrust fine of €4.1 billion (about $4.7 billion) is now final. The European Court of Justice ruled on Thursday that Google’s earlier defeat against a European Commission penalty should stand. Google has no further right to appeal. For Android users and phone makers everywhere, including Pakistan, this verdict closes a landmark case that reshaped how smartphones reach your hands.
What Was the Google Android Antitrust Fine About?
The dispute dates back to a 2016 investigation by the European Commission, when regulators found that Google was systematically abusing its dominant market position to squeeze out competing browsers and search platforms.
The European Commission said Google imposed illegal restrictions since 2011 on Android device makers and mobile network operators. To get access to the Play Store, manufacturers had to pre-install the Google Search app and Chrome browser. Some makers were also paid to place Google Search exclusively on devices, while phone makers that wanted Google apps were blocked from selling even one handset running an unapproved Android fork.
Think of it this way: if a phone brand wanted to sell a device with the Google Play Store on it, Google would only agree if the maker also put Google Search and Chrome front and centre on the phone. Regulators called this an unfair deal that blocked rival search engines and browsers from ever getting a fair start.
The fine was originally set at €4.34 billion by the European Commission in 2018, and was later trimmed to €4.125 billion by the EU General Court in 2022. Google appealed to the European Court of Justice hoping for a bigger reduction, or a full reversal. Instead, it got neither.
How Did the Court Rule?
The Court of Justice of the European Union, the bloc’s highest judicial authority, has officially dismissed Google’s final appeal, permanently sealing the record-setting €4.1 billion antitrust fine originally handed down by regulators nearly a decade ago.
Google argued during its appeal that the Commission underestimated competitive pressure from Apple’s iOS and that the case was based on outdated market conditions. The CJEU rejected those arguments, ruling that the lower court had correctly assessed the anti-competitive effects of Google’s Android agreements.
A Google spokesperson said the judgment ‘fails to recognize our investment to ensure Android remains open, interoperable and free.’ The company noted it adapted its agreements after the 2018 decision, added user-choice measures in 2021, and made more than 20 product changes after the Digital Markets Act took effect in 2024.
Part of a Much Bigger Fight with the EU
This €4.1 billion fine is only one piece of a bigger picture. The penalty is one chapter in a much longer story. Google has accumulated close to €11 billion in EU antitrust fines over the past decade across multiple cases, including a €2.4 billion fine in 2024 for abusing its shopping-comparison service dominance, and a €2.95 billion penalty in 2025 for favouring its own ad-tech products.
The Digital Markets Act now gives regulators additional tools to police Google’s search results and app store practices, and the Commission has already opened investigations under the new framework. Earlier this year, the company was told to lift technical barriers to rival AI search assistants on Android and provide key data to other search engine providers.
As one legal expert told CNBC, ‘The decision itself is particularly important in so far as it represents the end of what might be termed the European Commission’s first stage battle with big tech.’
What Changes for Phone Makers Globally?
Following the original 2018 decision, Google was required to change its Android licensing practices in Europe, introducing a choice screen for search engines and unbundling Chrome from the Play Store licence. This ruling cements those remedies as permanent features of Google’s European operations, not temporary measures awaiting a potential reversal on appeal.
The outcome strengthens the Commission’s hand in similar cases involving self-preferencing and ecosystem lock-in. It may also influence global antitrust thinking, as regulators in the US, UK, and elsewhere scrutinise Google’s mobile and search practices.
For phone brands, the message is clear: bundling deals that force pre-installation as a condition of access to an app store are legally risky, at least in Europe. Other regulators around the world are watching closely.
Why Pakistani Android Users and Phone Makers Should Care
Pakistan runs almost entirely on Android. Android commands 72.77% of the global mobile operating system market as of late 2025, powering approximately 3.9 billion active devices worldwide, while iOS holds 26.82%. In Pakistan, the ratio skews even more towards Android, with iPhones accounting for only a small share of the market.
According to data collected from Nayatel users across major cities in 2026, Samsung continues to lead the smartphone market with a 21.1 percent share. Vivo secured second position with 15.2 percent, Xiaomi followed with 14.1 percent, and OPPO maintained 12.2 percent. Every single one of these brands ships Android phones that come bundled with Google Search, Chrome, and the Play Store by default.
Pakistan’s phone assembly industry is also growing fast. Pakistan’s mobile phone manufacturing and assembly sector crossed 39.23 million units during FY 2025-26, with Vivo leading by volume at over 6.14 million units. Pakistan met 94 percent of its mobile phone demand through local manufacturing and assembly in the first 10 months of 2025. These local assemblers all depend on the same Google licensing system that the EU just put under a legal spotlight.
The EU ruling does not directly change how phones are sold in Pakistan today. Pakistan’s regulators, including the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), do not have the same competition rules that Europe applies to tech companies. However, if this ruling encourages phone brands to offer more genuine choice globally, Pakistani consumers could eventually see phones where alternative search engines or browsers are easier to set as defaults. For local assemblers, any shift in Google’s global licensing policies would ripple down to how they configure devices coming off production lines. You can read more about Pakistan’s growing smartphone assembly sector and the brands shaping it in our coverage of latest Android phone launches in Pakistan.
The bigger takeaway is this: as platforms like Android face growing scrutiny worldwide, the rules around what apps must be pre-installed, and which can be left out, may slowly become more open. That is good news for competition, even if the direct effects in Pakistan will take time to arrive.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Google Android antitrust fine?
It is a €4.1 billion penalty that the European Commission imposed on Google in 2018 for forcing phone makers to pre-install Google Search and Chrome as a condition of accessing the Play Store. The EU’s top court has now confirmed this fine permanently.
Can Google appeal further?
No. Google has no further right to appeal. The Court of Justice of the European Union is Europe’s highest court, and its ruling is final and legally binding.
Will this change Android phones in Pakistan?
Not immediately. The ruling applies to Google’s European operations, and Pakistan has its own regulatory framework. However, if Google changes its global bundling practices as a result of ongoing EU and international pressure, Pakistani users and local assemblers could see more default-app choice on Android phones over time.
Is this the biggest fine the EU has given Google?
The Android antitrust penalty remains the largest the Commission has ever imposed on the tech company, though Google has accumulated close to €11 billion in EU antitrust fines over the past decade across multiple cases.













