The European Commission's 30-day deadline to formally acknowledge the Football Supporters Europe (FSE) and Euroconsumers Article 102 complaint, filed on 24 March , closes on 23 April. As of 19 April, no DG COMP case number has been registered. A Commission spokesperson said the filing will be assessed 'under standard procedures' and stopped there.
DG COMP is the Commission directorate that runs EU competition cases; a case number is the procedural marker that moves a complaint from the inbox to the queue. Without one, the complaint is not yet formally on the register, which is what makes the 23 April date a test rather than a formality. If the Commission clears the window, it signals the file has crossed the administrative threshold for substantive review. Silence past the window does not close the file, but it puts the Commission's calendar publicly behind Brussels' own political calendar around the tournament.
Article 102 enforcement against a sports governing body requires a dominance-and-market test Brussels has not previously run in court. That legal gap is precisely why the 24 MEPs led by Brando Benifei have also named the Digital Fairness Act as a parallel remedy, giving Brussels two routes to act. The DC-based consumer protection investigation opened alongside the 13 April final-match ticket ceiling adds a second jurisdiction; the 30-day window therefore lands as the first publicly visible test of which regulator moves first.
