Liberty Global Inc. was founded in 2005 when Liberty Media International, Inc. (LMI) and UnitedGlobalCom, Inc. (UGC) merged. LMI and UGC became subsidiaries of Liberty Global. UGC founder was Gene Schneider. UGC was also built on acquisitions. United International Holding, later called UGC, acquired 50% of
UPC from Dutch electronic concern
Philips in 1995, and 100% in 1997. The new entity had operations in 18 countries and networks over approximately 23 million homes, making it one of the largest broadband services companies in the world. Liberty acquired German company Unitymedia in November 2009 for $5.2 billion. In 2010, Liberty sold its stake in Jupiter Telecommunications, a Japanese telecommunications-services provider. On November 9, 2012, Liberty Global acquired Puerto Rico-based cable company
OneLink Communications. In January 2013, Liberty Global raised its stake in Belgium-based
Telenet from 50.2% to 58%. The acquisition was noted by
The New York Times as one of the 10 largest cable deals of all time. It was reported that this acquisition would make Liberty Global the largest broadband company in the world. Liberty Global announced it would be acquiring Dutch cable company
Ziggo for €10 billion in January 2014. The acquisition was completed in November 2014, when the services of
UPC Nederland began to be merged into the new business. Liberty Global and
Discovery Communications became joint owners of
All3Media in May 2014 in a £500 million joint deal. In July 2014, Liberty Global acquired a 6.4% stake in
ITV plc, valued at £481 million. Liberty's stake in the company increased to 9.9% in July 2015. In November 2015, Liberty Global announced its acquisition of
Cable & Wireless Communications. The $5.3 billion deal expanded Liberty Global's presence into the Caribbean & greater Latin America. The acquisition was completed in May 2016. Liberty Global and Discovery Communications paid approximately $195 million for a 3.4% stake in
Lions Gate Entertainment Group in November 2015. Liberty CEO
Mike Fries joined the Lion's Gate board of directors as part of the acquisition. Liberty invested £7.5 million in global broadband cable network Technetix in July 2016. In November 2016, Liberty Global's Virgin Media subsidiary released its
Netflix and other app-enabled set-top V6 box. Liberty Global was also ranked 88th on the
Forbes "World's Most Innovative Companies" list in 2016. At the end of 2017, Liberty Global announced the decision to sell its operations in Austria, UPC Austria – the country's largest cable operator, to T-Mobile Austria for €1.9 billion, which was then rebranded
Magenta Telekom. In January 2018, Liberty Latin America spun off from Liberty Global. The new publicly traded company, Liberty Latin America Ltd., operates independently throughout parts of the
Caribbean and
South America. On May 9, 2018, Liberty Global announced the sale of its operations in Germany, Hungary, Romania and the Czech Republic to Vodafone for €19 billion ($22.7 billion). The sale closed for $21.3 billion in July 2019. All of these operations, formerly named UPC (
Unitymedia in Germany), were since rebranded to Vodafone. In December 2018, Liberty Global announced the sale of its DTH satellite TV operations in Hungary (
UPC Direct), Czech Republic, Slovakia (in both named
freeSAT) and Romania (
Focus Sat) to
M7 Group. Under M7 Group, Czech and Slovak operations were integrated with
Skylink, Hungarian operations adopted
Direct One name and logo, while Romanian operations retained its name, only changing its logo to match with its new parent. In 2019, Liberty Global announced an initiative to offer broadband with speeds of 1
Gbps across several European cities through the company's GigaCities program. In August 2020, Liberty Global announced that it would be buying
Sunrise Communications AG for $7.4 billion. The company attempted to acquire Sunrise Communications multiple times; according to Mike Fries, the chief executive officer of Liberty Global, "It wasn't a question of 'is this a good deal?' only a matter of how it would get done". On the 11th November Sunrise became a subsidiary of Liberty Global. In September 2021, Liberty Global announce the sale of its Polish operations to
Iliad's subsidiary Play (P4) for $1.8bn. The transaction was closed on 1 April 2022. In July 2023, Liberty Global's shareholders voted overwhelmingly for Liberty Global to
redomicile from the United Kingdom to Bermuda. In November 2023, Liberty Global completed the redomicile. In November 2024, Liberty Global announced the completion of the spin-off transaction of
Sunrise. This transaction resulted in Sunrise becoming an independent public entity, operating autonomously in the Swiss telecommunications market. The move allowed Liberty Global shareholders to participate directly in Sunrise's future performance. In 18 December 2025, Liberty Global sold the last UPC asset in Slovakia to E& PPF Telecom Group for €95 Million, making end to their UPC business.
Merger with Vodafone in the Netherlands In June 2015,
Vodafone confirmed talks with Liberty Global focused on potential partnerships, but denied that a full merger was in the works. Liberty Global invested in Guavus, a data analytics company, in September 2015. In February 2016, it was announced that
Vodafone and Liberty Global would merge Dutch operations. Liberty's Dutch subsidiary, Ziggo, would work with Vodafone's mobile network. Vodafone paid Liberty €1 billion as part of the joint venture valued at €3.5 billion. The deal was approved by the European Commission in August 2016. On 31 December 2016, the proposed merger of Liberty Global's and Vodafone Group's Dutch operations was completed, resulting in a joint venture called
VodafoneZiggo Group Holding B.V.
Innovations and investments In 2013–2016, Liberty Global invested EUR 14.5 billion in infrastructure, including investments to bring high-speed internet to four million more European households through new build and upgrades. In October 2017, Liberty Global opened the Telenet Innovation Centre in Brussels, its second innovation hub alongside the Tech Campus near Amsterdam. The Innovation Center is focused on testing Internet of Things (IoT) solutions and mobile technologies, including the introduction and preparation of 5G networks.
Video properties Liberty Global offers Netflix in 30 countries in Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean and other video-on-demand platforms as MaxDome in Germany, Play and Play More in Belgium, and MyPrime in Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ireland, Switzerland and the Netherlands. In 2017, Liberty Global partnered with affiliate Lionsgate and subsidiary premium channel Starz on a television series,
The Rook. The show, which premiered in summer 2019, is adapted by
Stephenie Meyer from the
novel of the same name written by
Daniel O'Malley. In February 2018, Liberty Global announced a partnership with
Amazon Prime Video on the television series called
The Feed, premiering in 2019. The show was co-produced in partnership with the
Amazon Studios division and launched as an on-demand programme in Europe, Latin and North America. ==Horizon TV==