European Commission Press Release of June 23, 2025 

Brussels 

Commission approves the acquisition of Dorna by Liberty Media without conditions

The European Commission has unconditionally approved the proposed acquisition of Dorna Sports S.L. (‘Dorna') by Liberty Media Corporation (‘Liberty Media') under the EU Merger Regulation. The Commission concluded that the merger would not raise competition concerns in the European Economic Area (‘EEA').

Today's decision follows an in-depth investigation of the proposed transaction. Liberty Media and Dorna are both international media companies. Liberty Media owns interests in a broad range of media, sports and entertainment businesses, including the motorcar competition Formula 1. Dorna is the organiser and holder of the commercial rights for the motorcycle competition FIM World Championship Grand Prix (‘MotoGP'). According to Liberty Media, the transaction will allow it to use its experience in media, sports and entertainment, including with Formula 1, to grow the reach and appeal of MotoGP.

The Commission's investigation

In the context of its in-depth investigation, the Commission assessed whether the transaction would reduce competition in the licensing of broadcasting rights for sports content.  More specifically, the Commission found that:

The Commission therefore concluded that the proposed acquisition would not raise competition concerns in the EEA and cleared it unconditionally.

Companies and products

Liberty Media, headquartered in the US, owns interests in a broad range of media, sports and entertainment businesses, including Formula 1. Formula 1 holds the exclusive commercial rights to the FIA Formula One World Championship, a motorcar race-based competition.

Dorna, headquartered in Spain, is an international sports management, media and marketing company that holds the commercial rights for MotoGP as well as for other motorcycle racing championships.

Merger control rules and procedure

The transaction was notified to the Commission on 14 November 2024. On 19 December 2024, the Commission launched an in-depth investigation.

The Commission has the duty to assess mergers and acquisitions involving companies with a turnover above certain thresholds (see Article 1 of the EU Merger Regulation) and to prevent concentrations that would significantly impede effective competition in the European Economic Area or any substantial part of it.

The vast majority of notified mergers do not pose competition problems and are cleared after a routine review. From the moment a transaction is notified, the Commission generally has 25 working days to decide whether to grant approval (Phase I) or to start an in-depth investigation (Phase II).

More information will be available on the Commission's competition website, in the public case register under the case number M.11539.