The European Council of Ministers on Monday adopted a Commission proposal for a Directive on antitrust damages actions. The Directive will help citizens and companies claim damages if they are victims of infringements of EU antitrust rules, such as cartels or abuses of dominant market positions. Among other things, it will give victims easier access to evidence they need to prove the damage suffered and more time to make their claims. The Directive is designed to achieve a more effective enforcement of the EU antitrust rules overall. It will fine-tune the interplay between private damages claims and public enforcement, and preserve the attractiveness of tools used by European and national competition authorities, in particular leniency and settlement programs. In April, the European Parliament had already approved a compromise text of the Commission's initial proposal. The Directive is expected to be formally signed during the Parliament's plenary session at the end of November. Member States will have two years to implement it.
The Directive has introduced many improvements. National courts can order companies to disclose evidence when victims claim compensation. The courts will ensure that such disclosure orders are proportionate and that confidential information is duly protected.
A final decision of a national competition authority finding an infringement will automatically constitute proof of that infringement before courts of the same Member State in which the infringement occurred.
Victims will have at least one year to claim damages once an infringement decision by a competition authority has become final.
If an infringement has caused price increases and these have been "passed on" along the distribution chain, those who suffered the harm in the end will be entitled to claim compensation.Consensual settlements between victims and infringing companies will be made easier by clarifying their interplay with court actions. This will allow a faster and less costly resolution of disputes.
Private damages actions before courts and public enforcement of antitrust rules by competition authorities are complementary tools. The Directive seeks to fine-tune the interplay between them and to ensure that while victims are fully compensated, the key role of competition authorities in investigating and sanctioning infringements is preserved. In particular, cooperation between companies and competition authorities under so-called "leniency" programs plays a key role in detecting infringements. The Directive therefore contains safeguards to ensure that facilitating damages actions does not reduce companies' incentives to cooperate with competition authorities.
EU Commissioner in charge of competition policy Margrethe Vestager said, "We need a more robust competition culture in Europe. So I am very glad that the Council has now also formally approved the Directive on antitrust damages actions. I am very pleased that it will be easier for European citizens and companies to receive effective compensation for harm caused by antitrust violations."
For comments and feedback contact: editorial@rttnews.com
Political News
May 08, 2026 15:50 ET Manufacturing and services sector survey results and labor market data from main economies were the highlight on the economics news front this week. Factory orders and jobs report dominated the news flow in the U.S. Similarly, industrial production data from German garnered attention in Europe. In Asia, purchasing managers’ survey results from China and the central bank decision from Australia were in focus.