Aston Villa are set to be hit with a heavy fine for breaching Uefa’s financial rules for a second year running. The club are expected to have breached Uefa’s squad cost rule, which imposes financial penalties if a club’s spending on player wages, transfers and agents is more than 70 per cent of its revenue.
The rule is effectively a luxury tax and Villa were fined €6million (about £5.2million) in July for breaching the 80 per cent level during 2024, and that limit was reduced by Uefa to 70 per cent for 2025, which the club have struggled to comply with.
However, it is thought Villa are not in danger of violating their settlement deal agreed with Uefa last year for breaching its separate football earnings rule that covers financial losses. That deal included a €5million fine, targets around future losses and some transfer restrictions. Breaches of the settlement can lead to more serious sanctions such as exclusion from European competition.
Villa are understood to have complied with the Premier League's PSR rules, although that was helped by the club being able to register as income the £55m they received for selling their women's team to their parent company.
The income from the women's team sale was not included as part of the submission to Uefa and there has been a big drop in revenues as a result of competing in the Europa League rather than the Champions League.
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