EU Court Could Redefine SVOD Refund Rights
Wiggin LLP analyzes an EU consumer law case pending before the Court of Justice of the European Union (Case C-234/25 Sky Österreich Fernsehen) on whether subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) contracts should be treated as “digital content” or a “digital service” under the EU Consumer Rights Directive, which determines whether a 14-day withdrawal (cancellation) right applies. The article discusses the Advocate General’s February 2026 Opinion, highlighting operational and pricing challenges if streaming services must allow withdrawals while charging for content consumed, and argues SVOD should remain classified as digital content so providers can rely on the digital-content withdrawal exception when required consents/disclosures are met.
Key Takeaways
- Case C-234/25 could determine whether EU consumers can cancel SVOD within 14 days (and potentially seek refunds).
- Classification is the fulcrum: “digital content” can use the withdrawal exception (with proper consent/acknowledgment and information duties); “digital service” generally can’t.
- The Advocate General flags “binge-and-refund” risk, but suggests charging for actual content consumed—likely requiring complex metering and pricing rules.
- Wiggin’s position: SVOD resembles TVOD and other streamed “digital content”; continuous supply shouldn’t automatically make it a “digital service.”
- Practical prep: revisit signup flows, consent language, and audit trails to ensure the digital-content exception is enforceable where available.
Why It Matters
This isn’t just consumer-law hair-splitting—it’s a unit economics grenade. If SVOD gets treated like a “digital service,” EU streaming could inherit a standardized 14-day “try, binge, bye” window that forces new refund logic, title-level valuation, and disputes over what was “consumed.” The meme to watch: “metered withdrawals” turning streaming into a micro-billing problem nobody asked for. For execs and product teams, the strategic question is whether regulation nudges subscriptions toward shorter commitments, fewer promos/free trials, and more friction at onboarding—right when Europe is already a battleground for ARPU and retention.
Read full article at wiggin.co.uk