...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

European Commission slaps three major fashion brands with €157 million fine

Business • Oct 14, 2025, 12:24 AM
4 min de lecture
1

The European Commission on Tuesday fined Gucci, Chloé and Loewe €157 million for preventing their retailers from setting their own prices for products designed and sold by them, reducing competition and thus increasing tariffs and offering consumers less choice — actions in breach of EU antitrust laws.

“In Europe, all consumers, whatever they buy, and wherever they buy it, online or offline, deserve the benefits of genuine price competition,” European Commissioner for Competition Teresa Ribera said.

“This decision sends a strong signal to the fashion industry and beyond that we will not tolerate this kind of practices in Europe, and that fair competition and consumer protection apply to everyone, equally.”

What it means is that the brands have prevented retailers from undercutting the recommended price, running deeper discounts or timing their own sales. This limits the flexibility and price competitiveness between vendors, whether online or in physical stores, and the effective price floor stays high.

The Commission found all three brands ran schemes that stripped independent retailers of pricing freedom for almost their entire ranges — apparel, leather goods, footwear and accessories. Retailers were told not to deviate from “recommended” prices, cap discounts and stick to brand-dictated sales windows.

In some cases, discounts were banned outright, while the brands monitored compliance and leaned on resellers who broke ranks.

Luxury and high-end brands place a lot of emphasis on the prestige element of their products, with Chloé boots or Loewe bags representing a status symbol for buyers. If the retailers drop the prices on their own, brands can argue that their image is being damaged.

Gucci hit the hardest

According to the EU antitrust watchdog, depriving retailers of their ability to set prices freely reduces competition between them, which violates the EU’s sacred principle of free and undistorted competition in the internal market, the objective being to give European consumers choice. It also increases prices.

The Commission’s investigation, which began in 2023 with inspections at companies' premises, also found that Gucci, Chloé and Loewe aimed to protect their own sales from competition by retailers themselves. Gucci alone even went as far as to forbid its retailers from selling a specific line of products online.

The Commission decided to crack down on the three fashion brands together, despite their independence, because the illegal practices occurred over roughly the same period — between 2015 and 2023 — and many of the retailers involved sold products from all three brands.

Gucci, Chloé and Loewe stopped their pricing policies towards their retailers when the Commission launched its investigation, it said.

Fines were calculated under the EU’s 2006 guidelines, factoring in gravity, duration, geographic scope and the value of sales concerned. All three companies received reductions for cooperating under the Commission’s antitrust procedures, with Loewe and Gucci receiving a 50% lower fine and Chloé getting their fine reduced by 15%.

In detail, Gucci was doled out the most significant fine of €119 million, followed by Chloe (€19 million) and Loewe (€18 million).

Crucially, the rulings also arm consumers and rivals — any person or company harmed can sue for damages in national courts, with the Commission’s final decision serving as binding proof that the behaviour occurred and was unlawful.

The EU’s Antitrust Damages Directive eases disclosure and quantification, smoothing the path to compensation.

So if you think you paid too much for your Loewe Puzzle Bag at a department store before 2023, consider filing a damages suit to get some of your money back.


Today

Meta to allow parents to limit teenagers’ interactions with AI
Business • 11:00 AM
2 min
The changes come as the social media giant, which owns Facebook and Instagram, faces criticism over harms to children from its platforms.
Read the article
Nearly 70% of US adults considered obese under proposed new definition, study finds
Business • 10:45 AM
3 min
The new approach would label someone as being obese if they have a BMI over 40 or other signs of weight-related health problems.
Read the article
England and Wales to get long-lasting HIV prevention jab for first time
Business • 10:31 AM
2 min
The drug, known as cabotegravir, must be administered every two months.
Read the article
Dutch parties embrace TikTok (again) ahead of the October election
Business • 10:13 AM
12 min
The social media platform was previously banned by several parties due to security concerns.
Read the article
China’s BYD makes largest recall of 115,000 cars over design issues
Business • 10:08 AM
3 min
The move brings into question BYD’s low-cost business model as Chinese firms undercut competitors on price.
Read the article
AI models' bias toward flattery risks spreading false medical information, study warns
Business • 9:05 AM
4 min
Researchers found that even the most advanced chatbots often generate false information rather than challenge flawed medical-related prompts.
Read the article
Denmark eyeing Australia’s under-16 social media ban as potential model
Business • 8:43 AM
4 min
A Danish ambassador said the Nordic country 'will be looking at what Australia does' on its world-leading ban.
Read the article
Lithuanian children learn how to build, programme and fly drones in after-school course
Business • 7:55 AM
5 min
Through the course, Lithuania is aiming to prepare society for any future Russian threats and comes after a surge in drone incursions, allegedly Russian, reported in European airspace.
Read the article
BBVA fails in €17bn takeover battle for smaller Spanish rival Sabadell
Business • 7:11 AM
3 min
The bid only convinced shareholders representing 25.47% of Sabadell voting rights. That was far short of the 50% BBVA needed for the deal to pass outright.
Read the article
TikTok’s algorithm amplified ‘glorified military content’ during NATO meeting, analysis shows
Business • 5:00 AM
4 min
A recent analysis by European non-profit AI Forensics found that popular social media app TikTok amplified pro-military videos during the June NATO meetings in the Hague.
Read the article
Russian cyberattacks against NATO members up 25% in a year, analysis shows
Business • 12:40 AM
2 min
A Microsoft analysis found that Russian actors are ramping up cyberattacks against NATO countries amid rising tensions.
Read the article
Denmark is ramping up defence tech spending amid security concerns. Here’s what it’s investing in
Business • 12:01 AM
5 min
Euronews Next takes a look at the key technologies Denmark and its autonomous territories want to invest in to bolster defence.
Read the article