What you need to knowA court in Rome ruled that seven years of Netflix price hikes (2017–2024) were illegal because the company failed to provide specific, justified reasons for the increases in its contracts.Long-term Italian subscribers could see significant refunds: up to €500 for Premium users and €250 for those on the Standard plan.Netflix has 90 days to notify all affected customers through its website and national media or face a €700 daily fine.

Just days after hiking prices again for U.S. customers, Netflix has been slapped with a court ruling in Italy that could force the streamer to hand back hundreds of euros to long-time subscribers.

Android Central’s Take

I find it ironic that Netflix spent years trying to stop password sharing to make more money, but now it might owe billions because it did not follow basic consumer laws. If the company had focused more on providing value and less on finding ways to charge customers extra, it might have avoided this €500-per-person mess.

Italian consumer group Movimento Consumatori sued Netflix over four price increases between 2017 and 2024, according to Ars Technica. The problem was that Netflix’s contracts reportedly did not explain why prices could change in the future.