SQUAD COST RULE

Uefa agree new financial sustainability rules for clubs

A new “squad cost rule” will limit spending on wages, transfers and agent fees to 70 pre cent of a club’s revenue — with that figure reached after a three-year gradual change.

In Summary

• Uefa added that acceptable losses will double from 30 million euros (Sh3.7bn) over three years to 60 million euros (Sh7.5bn) over the same period.

• The new regulations will come into force in June 2022, with a gradual implementation over three years so clubs have time to adapt.

Uefa President Aleksander Ceferin during a press conference
Uefa President Aleksander Ceferin during a press conference
Image: /FIFA

Uefa’s executive committee has approved new “sustainability regulations” to replace the previous Financial Fair Play system, president Aleksander Ceferin said on Thursday.

A new “squad cost rule” will limit spending on wages, transfers and agent fees to 70 pre cent of a club’s revenue — with that figure reached after a three-year gradual change.

“Uefa’s first financial regulations, introduced in 2010, served its primary purpose,” Ceferin said at the Executive Committee meeting in Nyon.

“They helped pull European football finances back from the brink and revolutionised how European football clubs are run.

“However, the evolution of the football industry, alongside the inevitable financial effects of the pandemic, has shown the need for wholesale reform and new financial sustainability regulations.”

Uefa added that acceptable losses will double from 30 million euros (Sh3.7bn) over three years to 60 million euros (Sh7.5bn) over the same period.

The new regulations will come into force in June 2022, with a gradual implementation over three years so clubs have time to adapt.