Chelsea, Aston Villa, and Nottingham Forest all hit by fines from Uefa

Chelsea, Aston Villa, and Nottingham Forest all hit by fines from Uefa

Chelsea, Aston Villa, and Nottingham Forest have all been hit with fines from Uefa for violating squad-cost regulations.

Villa bore the heaviest sanction at £19.4million following what the governing body described as a “significant breach” of its 2025 spending rules.

Beyond the substantial fine, Villa will be limited in registering new signings for their Champions League squad during the upcoming campaign.

Villa may see a considerable portion of the penalty waived, however, as £12.9million remains suspended on the condition that the Midlands-based club substantially reduce their squad-cost ratio throughout 2026.

Chelsea, Aston Villa, and Nottingham Forest have all been hit by fines from Uefa

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GETTY/PA

This additional breach will cost the Tyneside club a further £8.6million, but £6million of that sum remains conditional on meeting future financial requirements.

Three of the penalised clubs engaged in transactions involving sales to directly connected companies or transfers to associated football teams.

Such dealings were previously acceptable under Premier League regulations but fell foul of Uefa’s stricter financial framework.

Chelsea transferred midfielder Mathis Amougou to Strasbourg in a £12million deal, while Villa generated income through the sale of their women’s side.

Aston Villa were dealt the fiercest fine

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Newcastle recorded profits of £34.7million by disposing of the St James’ Park leasehold, along with surrounding land, to PZ Holdings Limited, a subsidiary business.

These types of related-party transactions will no longer be permitted under domestic rules from the coming season.

Uefa tightened its spending threshold from 80 per cent to 70 per cent of club income last season, creating a more demanding compliance environment.

The Premier League introduces its own squad-cost restrictions from Wednesday, yet the domestic approach differs significantly from European rules.

Newcastle were also dealt a fine

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Clubs competing in Uefa competitions must adhere to the 70 per cent ceiling, whilst the remaining eleven top-flight sides may allocate up to 85 per cent of their revenue towards playing staff and management.

This tiered system aims to preserve competitive balance by permitting clubs without European income to spend proportionally more.

Despite their absence from continental competition next season, Chelsea, Newcastle and Forest remain bound by Uefa’s ongoing compliance requirements.

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