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How The Premier League Squad Spending Cap Will Work


Premier League spending cap rules explained: What might clubs be ...

The details still need to be worked on but clubs not in Europe would be allowed to spend 85 per cent of their club revenue on squad costs.

Premier League Spending Caps Explained - Front Office Sports

It would work in tandem with newly proposed squad cost rules, which would limit spending on players, transfers, and agent fees to a portion ...

Premier League clubs agree to trial new spending cap systems

Teams in England's top division will trial a "Squad Cost Rules" system, which will limit spending on players to 85% of a club's football revenue.

The Premier League's spending cap: levelling the playing field?

This is essentially a spending cap, limiting the amount a club could invest to a multiple (likely to be about 4.5 to 5) of what the lowest-earning club ...

The new financial rules being voted today if passed would change ...

Today the premier league votes on the new finance caps, the idea is that all teams would be capped on n all squad finances ( wages transfer ...

Premier League clubs agree to push ahead with spending cap plans

Premier League clubs have agreed to push ahead with plans for a hard spending cap as part of the “squad cost” rules that will come into ...

Premier League spending cap to be trialled next season ... - SportsPro

The squad cost rules will limit 'on-pitch' spending on wages, transfer amortisation costs and so on to 85 per cent of a club's soccer revenue ...

Premier League Adopting Spending Cap Rules Explained

For the clubs not in Europe, they would be able to spend 85 per cent of their revenue on the same squad costs, which is in line with UEFA's ...

Premier League Spending Cap - Friend of Fulham

It's a cap on overall spending which will run concurrently with the regular PSR rules. It's going to be 5x the bottom teams' TV revenue ...

Premier League clubs agree to trial two new spending cap systems

The Premier League says clubs will trial two new forms of spending caps from next season. Teams in England's top division will trial a ...

Premier League clubs agree spending cap, could begin in 2025

The cap would limit how much clubs can spend in a bid to prevent the super-rich teams from dominating the league amid concerns over a growing ...

Premier League spending cap: New 'anchoring' rules, which clubs ...

Currently, clubs in the Champions League, Europa League and Europa Conference League can spend no more than 90% of their revenue on squad costs.

Premier League clubs agree to test new spending cap systems

Premier League clubs will trial two new forms of spending caps beginning next season following a vote at the league's annual general meeting today.

How The Premier League Squad Spending Cap Will Work

One proposed measure suggests capping spending on transfers and salaries at five times that of the lowest-earning club.

Premier League to introduce 'spending cap' as part new squad cost ...

For example, as per The Athletic, last year's cap would have been £518m (5x the £103.6m earned by Southampton). Chelsea were the only team to ...

A Spending Cap in the Premier League - The Swiss Ramble

The spending cap would run alongside the squad cost control ratio (covered in detail here), but would essentially act as a backstop to apply ...

Premier League clubs back plan to look at spending cap - BBC

A spending cap would limit clubs' outlay on transfers, wages and agents' fees. Proposals have reportedly included spending being capped to ...

Premier League clubs take step towards spending cap | Reuters

It would replace the current Profitability and Sustainability Rules (PSR) from 2025-26. The cap would limit how much clubs can spend in a bid to ...

Premier League clubs agree squad spending cap 'in principle' | UK ...

The proposed new rules, which are still to be agreed, would set a maximum limit based on a multiple of how much the lowest-earning club took ...

Premier League clubs agree in principle to spending cap ahead of ...

Premier League clubs have agreed in principle to a spending cap that will see sides anchor their expenditure to the TV revenue of the bottom club each season.