FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2026|No. 5622
Business · Mergers

Getty and Shutterstock Terminate $3.7B Merger After UK Regulator Conditions

Getty Images and Shutterstock have called off their $3.7 billion merger after the UK competition authority required Shutterstock to sell its editorial business.

Getty Images has decided to terminate its merger agreement with Shutterstock following UK regulatory conditions.
Getty Images has decided to terminate its merger agreement with Shutterstock following UK regulatory conditions.
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Cleared by the US, derailed by the UK: Getty’s Shutterstock merger falls apart

The $3.7B deal is being terminated after the UK required Shutterstock to sell its editorial business.

by Jess Weatherbed

Jul 1, 2026, 4:41 AM EDT

_Getty says it’s “not required” to accept approval conditions that would force Shutterstock to offload its editorial business._Image: The Verge

Jess Weatherbed is a news writer focused on creative industries, computing, and internet culture. Jess started her career at TechRadar, covering news and hardware reviews.

Getty is planning to axe its $3.7 billion merger agreement with Shutterstock after a UK regulator imposed restrictions that would prevent part of Shutterstock’s business from being included in the deal. The move comes despite the US Department of Justice granting the deal “ unconditional antitrust clearance” in February.

In an SEC filing published on Tuesday in the US, Getty said it is “not required to accept” approval conditions outlined by the UK Competitions and Markets Authority in May that require Shutterstock to sell its global editorial business, including the Backgrid and Splash paparazzi agencies.

Those conditions have proved unappealing enough for Getty to walk away from the deal, which aimed to combine the companies stock photo libraries. Both companies face competition from AI image generators that provide fast and cheap media content on demand. The company’s board of directors “unanimously” voted to terminate the merger agreement on July 6th, “assuming no material change in the aforementioned circumstances” occurs before July 7th. That essentially leaves the Getty/Shutterstock merger dead in the water.

Pressure from UK regulators has killed similar deals in the past. Meta was ordered to unload Giphy in 2021 over competition concerns, which it sold to Shutterstock in 2023.

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 1 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

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