Trial Date Set For October 2025 In Fubo Antitrust Lawsuit Against Disney, Fox And Warner Bros. Discovery

A jury trial of Fubo’s antitrust lawsuit against Disney, Fox Corp. and Warner Bros. Discovery will start October 6, 2025, a federal judge ruled Thursday.

U.S. District Court Judge Margaret Garnett issued an order setting out the timeline for the case, including several key dates leading up to the trial for motions and discovery. While some alterations could be made to the schedule along the way, Garnett wrote, “the start date for the trial, in particular, should be treated as firm.”

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Fubo, a pay-TV provider with nearly 1.5 million subscribers, filed the suit last February after the media companies announced they had formed a streaming joint venture, Venu Sports. Offering linear feeds of 15 sports-focused networks, the service was to have launched last month at a cost of $43 a month, significantly lower than what full-scale providers like Fubo charge. The company decried Venu as a monopolistic venture and, in a stunning ruling last month, Garnett agreed. She granted the company’s preliminary injunction request, which has prevented Venu from launching pending an appeal.

The trial date is closer to Fubo’s preferred window than the defendants’, who had suggested February 2026. “With Venu on the sidelines for the moment, there is no need for a rush,” Fox attorney Andrew Levander told Garnett during a pretrial conference in Manhattan earlier Thursday. Disney attorney Antony Ryan argued that a February 2026 start would be “a fast schedule” by the standards of antitrust law.

Levander noted that there will be an “enormous amount” of discovery material requiring analysis in the coming months. Long-private details of carriage negotiations – a lucrative but highly secretive underpinning of the modern media business – are expected to come to light in discovery, both sides have acknowledged.

The case has drawn attention in both sports and media circles not only for its rare window onto the inner workings of pay-TV but also given related developments in recent months as traditional media reckons with streaming. Disney has been in ongoing carriage fight with DirecTV since September 1, with the distributor citing Venu as a reason Disney hasn’t wanted to agree on a fair deal. Disney-owned ESPN, meanwhile, says it plans to launch a stand-alone streaming service of its own less than a year from now. And WBD over the summer lost rights to the NBA starting with the 2025-26 season, which changes what it would be bringing to the Venu party.