By Bob Miller  |  June 19, 2025

Category: Consumer News
Close up of the YouTube TV logo - live pay television
(Photo Credit: PixieMe/Shutterstock)

Update:

  • Disney has reached a class action settlement with consumers who alleged it breached antitrust laws with its live streaming carriage agreements. 
  • The notice of settlement was filed on June 6 in a California federal court. For now, the terms of the settlement are confidential.
  • The settlement ends claims brought in 2022 by consumers who alleged that The Walt Disney Co. drove up the cost of streaming live paid television by forcing its expensive ESPN sports channel onto streaming platforms.
  • The deal settles claims on behalf of YouTube TV, DirectTV and FuboTV subscribers, according to the notice.
  • Previously, a judge dismissed several anti-competition claims under the Sherman Act, but allowed the case to proceed under claims of obstructing customer choice.
  • Follow Top Class Actions and sign up for our free newsletter to receive updates on how to file a claim for the ESPN streaming fees settlement when details are available. 

YouTube TV live pay television class action overview:

  • Who: YouTube subscribers accuse Disney of driving up the cost of streaming on YouTube TV.
  • Why: The plaintiffs claim Disney forced its way into several competing streaming services as a way to control the market.
  • Where: The case was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. The four lead plaintiffs are from California, Arizona, Indiana and Kentucky.

(Nov. 28, 2022)

YouTube subscribers filed a class action antitrust lawsuit against The Walt Disney Co., alleging it unlawfully uses its power in the media industry to control competing streaming services, which drive up subscription costs on platforms such as YouTube.

Through its ownership and control of Hulu, the second largest streaming service in the United States that includes a live-TV streaming option, the complaint alleges Disney leverages a “horizontal, anticompetitive” advantage for ESPN and ESPN-related channels. Disney also owns ABC and 21st Century Fox.

The lawsuit accuses Disney of controlling pricing power over the entire live TV streaming market in two ways:

  • Disney’s carriage agreements require that base or lowest-priced bundles offered to streaming services must include ESPN
  • Disney’s carriage agreements include “Most Favored Nation” clauses that put upward price pressure on every rival live pay television streaming product

Live TV streaming costs doubled since Disney acquired Hulu in 2019, YouTube TV class action says

The plaintiffs say prices across the live paid television market have doubled since Disney acquired Hulu in 2019. It also claims Disney caused YouTube TV subscriptions to nearly double, from $35 per month to $65 per month, when Disney required that ESPN be included in the package. 

ESPN, according to an article on Yahoo Finance, is said to be the most expensive channel on basic cable and streaming plans, with some estimates pricing it at $9 or more per month. The plaintiffs allege that Disney requires streaming services to carry ESPN in its lowest-priced bundles, amounting to what the plaintiffs call an “ESPN tax.”

“Customers that left cable and satellite TV in favor of an (streaming) product in order to escape mandatory high-cost channels in their cable or satellite base package are faced with the same inefficient and unwanted product in the (streaming) market,” the YouTube TV class action states. Consumers who don’t want to pay for ESPN have no way to opt out, according to the complaint.

The lawsuit says that after taking control of Hulu in 2019, Disney immediately raised the price of Hulu’s Live TV offering by $10 per month, bringing the cost of the base package to $54.99. The complaint says other competing platforms followed suit. Within months, AT&T streaming increased $15, PlayStation Vue shuttered, Sling TV increased its subscription by $5 per month, YouTube raised prices by $15 per month and ,one year later, Disney raised the price of Hulu live TV by an additional $10 per month. 

With each increase, Hulu + Live TV further approached the average cost of traditional basic cable and satellite subscriptions, the YouTube TV class action claims.

In related Disney and ESPN news, a class action lawsuit claims that ESPN shares its digital subscribers’ viewing habits with Facebook without consent.

The YouTube TV live pay television class action is Heather Biddle, et al. v. The Walt Disney Co., Case No. 5:22-cv-07317, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.


Don’t Miss Out!

Check out our list of Class Action Lawsuits and Class Action Settlements you may qualify to join!


Read About More Class Action Lawsuits & Class Action Settlements:

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.

148 thoughts onDisney settles ESPN streaming fees class action lawsuit

1 12 13 14

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.