trivago N.V. files Antitrust Damages Claim Against Google in Germany
Dรผsseldorf, May 5, 2026 โ trivago N.V. (NASDAQ: TRVG) (“trivago” or the “Company”) today announced that it has filed an antitrust damages claim against Google LLC, Google Ireland Ltd., and Google Germany GmbH (collectively, “Google”) before the Regional Court of Hamburg, Germany.
The claim seeks compensation for damages trivago suffered as a result of Google’s conduct in the hotel metasearch market. Specifically, trivago contends that Google has been systematically favoring its own hotel metasearch service in its general search results pages, to the detriment of competing services such as trivago. The claim is based on Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) and related provisions of German competition law, which prohibit dominant companies from abusing their market position.
The claim covers the period from January 2014 through December 2025 and seeks substantial monetary damages based on an independent expert analysis. The claim further seeks disclosure of relevant traffic and revenue data held by Google. The claim also seeks a declaratory judgment establishing Google’s liability for damages from January 2026 onward.
“For more than a decade, we have raised concerns about Google using its dominance in general search to systematically steer millions of travelers away from hotel metasearch platforms like trivago and toward its own competing service. We believe this has weakened our competitive position, limited our ability to grow, and ultimately harmed the travelers who rely on fair and open competition. Similar conduct has been confirmed as unlawful by the European Commission and by the European Court of Justice. We are filing this claim to seek full compensation for the damages trivago has suffered. In our view, holding Google accountable is in the best interest of our shareholders, and of a travel ecosystem that deserves competition based on merit, not gatekeeping,” said Johannes Thomas, CEO and Managing Director of trivago.
The Company believes its claim has merit based on its analysis of the relevant facts and applicable European and German competition law, including the EU Commission’s 2017 decision in Case AT.39740 (Google Search (Shopping)). The EU Commission fined Google for abusing its dominant position by favoring its own comparison-shopping service in general search engine results pages and was upheld by the EU Court of Justice in September 2024. In addition, the EU Commission is currently investigating Google for potential non-compliance with the EU’s ban on self-preferencing under the Digital Markets Act. Several damages claims based on the EU Commission’s decision have already progressed through European courts, including two first-instance awards by the Regional Court of Berlin II in November 2025 and proceedings in Sweden where a decision is expected soon. The Company’s decision to pursue this claim at this time reflects, in part, the legal clarity provided by the EU Court of Justice’s September 2024 ruling upholding the Commission’s findings, which established a firm legal foundation for damages actions of this nature.