Chelsea have been handed a £2.58million fine by UEFA, with £1.72m suspended, after being found guilty of breaching UEFA’s squad cost ratio regulations.
In an official statement, Chelsea said: “Chelsea FC can confirm that the UEFA Club Monitoring process for season 2025/26 has concluded and UEFA has today published its outcome concerning the Club’s compliance position in relation the squad cost ratio for the 2025 calendar year.
“Following proactive and transparent engagement with UEFA, the UEFA Club Financial Control Body (CFCB) recognised the improving trend in the Club’s squad cost ratio for the 2025 calendar year.
“However, as the 70 per cent threshold for UEFA’s Squad Cost Ratio was narrowly exceeded, a fine will be paid.”
Under UEFA regulations, a club’s squad cost ratio must not exceed 70 per cent of turnover.
Every club surpassing that threshold received a fine calculated proportionally, based on how far they exceeded the limit and the scale of their squad cost surplus.
Chelsea are not alone among Premier League clubs in facing sanctions, with both Aston Villa (£19.38m conditional) and Newcastle United (£2.58m) also receiving punishment.
Villa have additionally been hit with a restriction on registering new players to their ‘A’ list for the 2026/27 campaign.
This is not the first occasion that Chelsea and Villa have fallen foul of the regulations.
Last year, the Blues received a £26.7m penalty, with a potential additional £51.2m should they fail to comply within the next four years.
Concerning this year’s sanction, UEFA confirmed on their official website: “Regarding Aston Villa FC and Chelsea FC, which had already been sanctioned in the previous season, the CFCB First Chamber took into consideration the improving trend in their squad cost ratio between 2024 and 2025 in line with projections submitted as part of their settlement agreement.
“As a result, part of the fine is conditional upon the clubs continuing to significantly decrease their squad cost ratio in 2026.”
Fellow BlueCo-owned Strasbourg have been handed restrictions on registering new players, alongside a £21.5m fine, with £10.3m conditional.
In an update on Strasbourg, UEFA said: “For RC Strasbourg, the portion of the fine exceeding the prize money earned by the club in the UEFA competition is conditional upon the club being able to significantly decrease its squad cost ratio in 2026.”
Following a dismal Premier League campaign, Chelsea will play no part in UEFA competitions next season. The Blues finished the 2025/26 season in 10th place in the Premier League table.
