The paper presents the evolution of attempts at regulating antitrust collective redress in Europe, and the omission of listing competition law infringements in the annex to Directive 2020/1828 on consumer collective actions and thus from its scope of application. It attempts to understand why the non-availability of antitrust collective actions is the result of the long-lasting drafting processes on the EU level that typically covered competition law, taking into account that the collective redress mechanism is the only real option for consumer private enforcement of antitrust. It calls for the European Commission, the European legislator and the Member States to finally regulate collective actions in the field of competition law as otherwise access to justice for victims of antitrust breaches is not guaranteed.