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Amazon refused permission to appeal go-ahead for UK lawsuits from retailers, consumers

By Thomson Reuters Feb 26, 2026 | 5:10 AM

LONDON, Feb 26 (Reuters) – Amazon on Thursday lost its latest bid to try to throw out two mass lawsuits from ​retailers and consumers worth up to ‌4 billion pounds ($5.41 billion) for allegedly abusing its dominant position.

Andreas Stephan, a competition law academic, brought one of the cases on behalf of over 200,000 ‌third-party ​retailers, worth up to ⁠2.7 billion pounds.

His lawyers ⁠allege that Amazon manipulates the “Buy Box” feature on its website to its own advantage and favours products that use Amazon’s own ​logistics centres and delivery network.

Consumer advocate Robert Hammond separately brought a case valued ⁠at up to 1.3 billion ⁠pounds on behalf of millions ​of Amazon customers for similar alleged abuses of ​dominance.

Amazon has previously said the claims are ‌without merit. It had argued the cases should not be certified to proceed, an early step in the proceedings, including because the ⁠economic methodology for proving the cases was flawed.

The Competition Appeal Tribunal last year certified both cases ⁠on an ‌opt-out basis, meaning members of the ⁠claimant class would be part ​of ‌the case unless they decide otherwise.

Amazon ​sought permission ⁠to appeal against that decision, but the Court of Appeal refused permission on Thursday.

Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

($1 = 0.7390 pounds)

(Reporting by Sam Tobin; editing by ​William James)