
Subscription fatigue meets its match in Rome, where a court just handed Netflix Italia a €500-per-customer reality check. ($576 US) If you’ve been paying premium rates since 2017, those price increases without consumer notice or justification might finally boomerang back to your bank account.
Court Delivers Consumer Victory
Rome tribunal voids Netflix’s unilateral price increases from 2017 to 2024, ordering refunds and rollbacks.
The Court of Rome’s Sixteenth Civil Section ruled Netflix’s price-changing clauses “vexatious and null” in a decision that affects millions of Italian subscribers. Those increases in 2017, 2019, 2021, and last November? All deemed unlawful under Italian Consumer Code.
Premium subscribers face immediate rollbacks from €19.99 to €11.99 monthly, while standard drops from €13.99 to €9.99. The court sided with Movimento Consumatori, declaring Netflix lacked “predefined justified reasons” for raising prices whenever it pleased.
Your Refund Reality Check
Long-term subscribers could see hundreds in refunds, but Netflix has 90 days to comply or face daily penalties.
Continuous premium subscribers since 2017 stand to collect roughly €500 in refunds, with standard users looking at €250. Netflix must notify every affected customer—including ex-subscribers—via email and registered mail, plus publish the ruling on its website for six months.
The streaming giant also faces newspaper ad requirements in Corriere della Sera and Il Sole 24 Ore. Miss the 90-day deadline? That’ll cost Netflix €700 daily in penalties. Movimento Consumatori President Alessandro Mostaccio isn’t messing around, threatening class action if refunds don’t materialize quickly.
Streaming’s European Reckoning
Similar pricing challenges emerge across Europe as regulators scrutinize subscription service tactics.
Netflix’s troubles extend beyond Italy’s borders. Poland’s consumer protection agency accuses the platform of illegal 2024 price hikes without proper consent, potentially triggering fines worth 10% of annual turnover. Spain’s FACUA consumer group filed similar complaints over October increases.
A Netflix spokesperson maintained the company will appeal, insisting “our subscribers come first” and claiming their terms always complied with Italian law. Yet this ruling signals growing European resistance to subscription services treating price changes like seasonal wardrobe updates.
Whether Netflix’s appeal succeeds remains unclear, but affected subscribers should monitor their email for official notifications about refunds and price adjustments in coming months.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Massachusetts court hears arguments in lawsuit alleging Meta designed apps to be addictive to kids - 2
A Lone Wolf Outsmarted Hunters in the Black Forest and Then Vanished - 3
What are parents to do as doctors clash with Trump administration over vaccines? - 4
Iranian-backed militias escalate in Iraq, targeting Kurdistan Region president Nechirvan Barzani - 5
The Most Compelling Innovation Advancements Somewhat recently
Top 10 Smash hit Computer games of the Year
3 back-to-back storms forecast to bring snow and surges of cold air across the Midwest to the Northeast
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket landed its booster on a barge at sea – an achievement that will broaden the commercial spaceflight market
France bans Muslim gathering citing risk to participants
Windows to the Previous: An Excursion Through the World's Notable Engineering
I visited the largest collection of public telescopes in the US in Oregon's high desert, and the dark skies blew me away
'No middle ground' for tackling antisemitism after Bondi Beach mass shooting, deputy FM Haskel says
Baby takes 1st steps after receiving groundbreaking gene-edited therapy
Turning to turkey’s tryptophan to boost mood? Not so fast













