---
title: "Fined $7 Billion in Two Years! Trump Administration Slams EU: These are \"Tariffs\" on US Tech Giants"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/282369286.md"
description: "Since the beginning of 2024, the EU has imposed fines totaling over 6 billion euros (approximately $7 billion) on American tech giants such as Google, Apple, and Meta. The Trump administration expressed strong dissatisfaction, directly denouncing the move as equivalent to \"tariffs\" and considering retaliatory tariff measures. The US Ambassador to the EU criticized the EU's \"over-regulation,\" and a Meta executive called the fines \"suppression of successful American companies.\" The EU, however, maintains that the fines are a \"last resort\" to uphold market rules"
datetime: "2026-04-10T16:10:22.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/282369286.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282369286.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/282369286.md)
---

# Fined $7 Billion in Two Years! Trump Administration Slams EU: These are "Tariffs" on US Tech Giants

The EU's regulatory crackdown on American tech giants is becoming a core point of friction in transatlantic relations.

Since the beginning of 2024, **Google, Apple, and Meta have cumulatively incurred over 6 billion euros (approximately $7 billion) in fines from the EU, involving multiple charges including antitrust and competition law violations**. Trump has escalated this issue to the level of trade policy. In February of this year, he signed a memorandum **explicitly stating that he would consider using tariffs in response to foreign governments imposing digital service taxes and fines on American companies**.

Andrew Puzder, the US Ambassador to the EU, stated directly that **"the EU cannot over-regulate, arbitrarily move the goalposts on regulation, and then impose massive fines on companies."** Joel Kaplan, Meta's Chief Global Affairs Officer, was even more direct, criticizing the EU's fines as "essentially imposing billions of dollars in tariffs on Meta."

Jacob Helberg, US Deputy Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment, pointed out that **fines against American companies are the biggest source of friction in US-EU economic relations**, with total fines levied by the EU on American tech companies exceeding $25 billion over the past two decades. The EU, on its part, maintains its position, **emphasizing that fines are a necessary means to uphold market rules and protect consumer interests, not discriminatory measures targeting companies from a specific country**.

## Six Fines Form the Main Focus of Controversy

Since 2024, the EU has issued six penalty notices to American tech giants, related to various regulations including the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and antitrust laws. Google, Apple, and Meta have all legally contested the related fines, and the cases are still in judicial proceedings.

**As the fines are all under judicial dispute, the EU has not yet collected the full amounts from the respective companies. However, according to legal provisions, companies are required to cover the fine amounts through advance payments or financial guarantees.**

An EU Commission spokesperson stated that all companies operating in the EU must be accountable to European citizens and comply with the rules designed to protect them, while emphasizing that fines are only for violations of EU rules by companies within Europe.

## Trump Administration Escalates Pressure

The Trump administration's criticism of the EU's regulatory actions continues to intensify. In an interview with CNBC on March 27, US Ambassador to the EU Andrew Puzder stated that **if the EU wants to participate in the AI economy, it needs access to data centers, data, and the US AI hardware ecosystem, "and cannot over-regulate, arbitrarily move the goalposts on regulation, and then impose massive fines on companies."**

Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick had previously stated in an interview with Bloomberg, "Let's resolve these outstanding cases and move on." When asked about the impact of EU fines on US-EU relations, a spokesperson for the US Department of Commerce referred inquiries to CNBC to this statement.

## EU: Fines Are a Last Resort, Have Prompted Behavioral Changes

The European Commission insists that its regulatory framework aims to protect consumers, not stifle innovation. A Commission spokesperson stated that **fines are a "last resort" and are only resorted to after attempts to find amicable solutions have failed.**

The Commission also cited regulatory successes: following the formal proceedings initiated by the EU in March 2025 under the DMA, Apple has allowed for smoother interoperability of competing smartwatches and other connected devices with iPhones, a move achieved without imposing fines. After receiving a non-compliance fine decision under the DMA in 2025 amounting to 2 million euros, Meta modified its "pay or consent" model on Facebook and Instagram, and will introduce new services to users in early 2026.

Apple, however, insists that the DMA "hinders innovation, weakens privacy protections, delays or reduces the quality of product releases, and increases security risks."

## Investigations Continue, Regulatory Pressure Unabated

**In addition to the fines already issued, the European Commission currently has multiple ongoing investigations into American tech companies.** In February of this year, the Commission notified Meta of its intention to take "interim measures" to prevent it from excluding third-party AI assistants on WhatsApp, a step that is part of related investigations.

Concurrently, in March of this year, the EU launched formal investigations into whether Snap's social media platform Snapchat complies with the Digital Services Act (DSA) regarding child online safety regulations.

As US-EU trade negotiations continue to progress, whether the issue of tech regulation fines can be incorporated into the bilateral consultation framework will be a focus of close market attention.

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