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Australia to charge Big Tech companies 2% levy unless they strike local news deals

By Thomson Reuters Apr 27, 2026 | 11:21 PM

By Christine Chen and Byron Kaye

SYDNEY, April 28 (Reuters) – The Australian government said on Tuesday that Meta, Alphabet’s Google and TikTok could face multimillion-dollar charges if they did not negotiate deals ​to pay local media outlets for news on their platforms.

A ‌proposed News Bargaining Incentive would tax the three big tech companies 2.25% on their local revenues unless they struck agreements, with the proceeds to be directed to news companies to boost Australian journalism.

“People are increasingly getting their news directly from Facebook, ‌from ​TikTok and from Google, and we believe ⁠it’s only fair that large ⁠digital platforms contribute to the hard work of journalism that enriches their feeds and that drives their revenue,” Communications Minister Anika Wells told a news conference.

“Platforms should do deals with news organisations. If ​they decide not to, they will end up paying more,” she said.

U.S. President Donald Trump opposes digital services taxes on U.S. tech ⁠giants and has threatened tariffs on countries ⁠that pursue them.

“We’re a sovereign nation. And my government ​will make decisions based upon the Australian national interest,” Prime Minister Anthony ​Albanese said at the same news conference.

Under the draft legislation, the ‌levy would start from the 2025-26 financial year, which starts on July 1.

“The News Media Bargaining Incentive means that if a platform doesn’t do a deal with a news publisher, the money will come to ⁠us and we will deliver that funding to news organisations based on how many journalists they employ,” Wells said.

The platforms would get bigger offsets for ⁠deals struck with smaller ‌organisations.

The News Bargaining Incentive is intended to replace ⁠2021 laws that mandated tech firms pay for news ​content ‌because those rules were “no longer working effectively,” the government ​said.

After the ⁠move Meta briefly blocked users from reposting news articles, but later struck deals with several Australian media firms that expired in 2024.

A spokesperson for TikTok declined to comment, while Meta and Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

(Reporting by Christine Chen and Byron Kaye in Sydney; Editing ​by Kate Mayberry)