×

UK tribunal gives go ahead for $4 billion lawsuit against Apple over iCloud services

By Thomson Reuters Jun 23, 2026 | 7:28 AM

LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) – Britain’s competition tribunal has approved a £3 billion ($4 billion) lawsuit against Apple over its iCloud storage service, consumer group Which? said on Tuesday, ​clearing the way for tens of millions of ‌consumers to join a collective action.

The Competition Appeal Tribunal granted earlier in June a collective proceedings order allowing Which? to represent Apple users, after rejecting an attempt by the U.S. tech giant to ‌block ​parts of the case.

Which? filed the ⁠claim in November 2024 and ⁠argues Apple abused a dominant position by “trapping” users of iPhones and other devices into its iCloud storage service, limiting their ability to switch to rival cloud providers.

The ​consumer group says Apple did this by technically restricting how certain files can be stored, tying iCloud to ⁠iOS devices and using prompts and ⁠system design to steer users towards its own ​service, weakening competition and driving up prices.

“Which? wants to make ​clear that no company, no matter how powerful, ‌can get away with abusing its position,” Which? Chief Executive Anabel Hoult said in a statement.

In response to a request for comment, Apple said the claims were unfounded.

“We work ⁠hard to make iCloud a great experience, but no customer is required to use it and customers in the UK have plenty ⁠of alternatives to ‌choose from,” it said in an emailed ⁠statement.

The case is being brought on behalf ​of ‌nearly 40 million UK iCloud users who ​used the ⁠service between November 2018 and June 2026. Which? estimates total damages at around £3 billion, with potential payouts of up to £77 per person of the claim succeed.

A trial is expected in 2028.

($1 = 0.7563 pounds)

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti; Editing by Mark Potter ​and Susan Fenton)