The UEFA Executive Committee has unveiled new Financial Fair Play regulations based on ‘three key pillars: solvency, stability, and cost control.’

The new Financial Fair Play regulations were approved during a meeting in Nyon today.

“Given their name, it is no surprise that the key objective of the new regulations is to achieve financial sustainability. These will be achieved through three key pillars: solvency, stability, and cost control,” a UEFA statement read.

“For solvency, the new no overdue payables (towards football clubs, employees, social/tax authorities, and UEFA) rule will ensure better protection of creditors. Controls will be performed every quarter and there will be less tolerance towards late payers.

“The new football earnings requirements are an evolution of the existing break-even requirements and will bring greater stability to club finances. To ease the implementation for clubs, the calculation of football earnings is similar to the calculation of the break-even result. While the acceptable deviation has increased from €30 million over three years to €60 million over three years, requirements to ensure the fair value of transactions, to improve the clubs’ balance sheet, and to reduce debts have been significantly strengthened.

“The biggest innovation in the new regulations will be the introduction of a squad cost rule to bring better control in relation to player wages and transfer costs. The regulation limits spending on wages, transfers, and agent fees to 70% of club revenue. Assessments will be performed on a timely basis and breaches will result in pre-defined financial penalties and sporting measures.

“The new regulations will come into force in June 2022. There will be gradual implementation over three years to allow clubs the necessary time to adapt.”

UEFA President Alexander Ceferin said: “UEFA’s first financial regulations, introduced in 2010, served its primary purpose. 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 has worked together with its stakeholders across European football to develop these new measures to help the clubs to address these new challenges. These regulations will help us protect the game and prepare it for any potential future shocks while encouraging rational investments and building a more sustainable future for the game.”

 

5 thought on “Official: UEFA unveil new Financial Fair Play regulations”
  1. @ G – No need to just comment just for the sake of it, (RIP Serie A) Explain your point, I bet you don’t know jack.

  2. @ralph

    “The regulation limits spending on wages, transfers, and agent fees to 70% of club revenue.”

    Serie A cant compete with EPL clubs financial power and its only going to get worse. There are 6 EPL clubs who make more revenue than Juventus, the richest Serie A team. Teams like Lazio, Roma, Atalanta, etc. make less than relegation teams in EPL. Thus now they are limited in spending to build teams. Serie A quality will continue to drop.

  3. @Ralph

    G is right. The oil and TV clubs will spend what they want – and get away with it when they overspend, probably – with crooked foreign money and fake “sponsorship” deals.

    Serie A is already run by clowns, so this’ll probably make it even worse. No new stadiums, no proper youth section, no oil money, and signing has-beens from England on huge wages and nobodies from elsewhere.

    Are those 4 things going to be solved soon? Not a hope. This is Italy, after all.

  4. Ralph@

    Without new and club owned stadiums serie a clubs can’t get the revenue to compete on European level.

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