Qualcomm says UK lawsuit over smartphone chip royalties will be withdrawn


FILE PHOTO: A Qualcomm logo and a computer motherboard appear in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Qualcomm ⁠on Tuesday said a London lawsuit alleging it had ⁠abused its dominant position to force Apple and Samsung ‌to pay inflated royalties will be withdrawn.

The British consumers' association called Which? had brought the case on behalf of around 29 million people who ​bought iPhones or Samsung devices since 2015.

Which? ⁠had said consumers were ⁠entitled to up to 480 million pounds ($652.03 million) in compensation, with ⁠its ‌arguing at a trial last year that Qualcomm made Apple and Samsung pay inflated royalties even if ⁠its chips are not used in a device ​under a worldwide ‌so-called no licence, no chips policy.

Qualcomm, however, said the ⁠lawsuit mischaracterised its ​long-standing requirement for manufacturers to obtain a licence for its standard essential patents before buying chipsets.

Before the Competition Appeal Tribunal could ⁠rule following last year's trial, Which? said ​in a statement that it would apply to withdraw the case having reached an agreement under which Qualcomm will make no ⁠payment to the claimant class.

Which? said that it had concluded Qualcomm's practices "didnot infringe competition laws, did notresult in inflated royalties, and did not lead to an increase in prices consumers paid ​for theirmobile phones".

A Qualcomm spokesperson said: "This recognition ⁠by the class representative, following a trial on the merits, ​reaffirms what the courts in the ‌United States have repeatedly held: Qualcomm's ​licensing practices are lawful and do not harm competition."

($1 = 0.7362 pounds)

(Reporting by Sam Tobin; editing by Catarina Demony)

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