World Watch/Luxembourg/Internet & Online Safety

Internet & Online Safety · Luxembourg

Internet & Online Safety - Luxembourg

Comprehensive lawEU Digital Services Act (Regulation (EU) 2022/2065), implemented nationally by the Law of 4 April 2025; the Autorité de la concurrence (Competition Authority) is the national Digital Services Coordinator. Hosting/illegal-content liability also rests on the amended e-commerce law of 14 August 2000.

Online content and platform safety in Luxembourg are governed by the directly-applicable EU Digital Services Act, fully in force since 17 February 2024, supplemented by the national Law of 4 April 2025 that designates a Digital Services Coordinator and sets enforcement powers and penalties. The Autorité de la concurrence supervises the roughly 195 intermediary/platform providers established in Luxembourg (a major hosting hub), while the European Commission directly oversees Very Large Online Platforms and Search Engines. National implementation focuses on illegal-content notice mechanisms, transparency of recommender systems and advertising, and protection of minors, coordinated with the data-protection (CNPD), audiovisual (ALIA) and product-safety (ILNAS) regulators.

EU DSA baseline in force

As an EU member state, Luxembourg applies Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 (Digital Services Act), whose full obligations have applied since 17 February 2024, covering notice-and-action on illegal content, transparency and protection of minors.

National implementing law

The Law of 4 April 2025 (from Bill 8309, adopted 2 April 2025) implements the DSA, amending the e-commerce law of 14 August 2000 and the competition law of 30 November 2022; the enforcement provisions entered into force on 11 April 2025.

Digital Services Coordinator

The Autorité de la concurrence (Competition Authority) is designated as Luxembourg's Digital Services Coordinator, supervising the ~195 intermediary providers established in Luxembourg, handling complaints, conducting inspections and acting as cross-border liaison; the Commission retains direct supervision of VLOPs/VLOSEs.

Penalties

For DSA breaches, the Competition Authority can impose fines of up to 6% of a provider's worldwide annual turnover, with powers to request information and order inspections.

Protection of minors & advertising

Platforms established in Luxembourg must let users flag potentially illegal content, must not serve advertising specifically targeting minors, and must explain why content is recommended (recommender-system transparency) — per the DSA, with no separate national age-verification mandate beyond the EU framework.

Inter-authority cooperation

On 11 March 2025 the Competition Authority and seven other bodies signed a cooperation agreement; it works with the CNPD (data protection), ALIA (audiovisual content) and ILNAS (dangerous products) for coherent DSA application.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →