Chelsea have been fined £10.75m for breaching Premier League rules, and a decision has been made on further punishment
17:57, 16 Mar 2026Updated 18:09, 16 Mar 2026
Chelsea will not receive further punishment in the form of a points deduction after a probe into secret £47m payments made to agents and third parties, football.london understands.
The Blues have been fined £10.75m, handed a suspended transfer ban on first team activity and a nine-month ban on signing academy talents after being found guilty of breaching Premier League financial rules.
The FA are set to follow suit and fine Chelsea, but Liam Rosenior's side will not be given a points deduction, following an alleged 74 rule breaches.
The Blues are likely to pay another hefty fine, escaping any form of sporting sanctions. Chelsea self-reported the financial irregularities after BlueCo and Todd Boehly acquired the club from former owner Roman Abramovich.
There are seven transfers that are at the heart of the Premier League's investigation. The transfers of Eden Hazard, Ramires, Willian, David Luiz, Andre Schurrle, Nemanja Matic and Samuel Eto'o have all been investigated with money paid to third parties or unlicenced agents.
The players in the transfers, are not accused of any wrongdoing. The judgement reads: "The investigation determined, and the club has similarly admitted, that the payments made… occurred with the knowledge and approval of certain senior former officers and/or directors of the club; were made via the third party entities with funds which, it is understood, were controlled by or associated with the then owner of the club, Mr Roman Abramovich."
There are also four other players who have had their names redacted from the Premier League report, though it's not yet clear why those transfers have been omitted.
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A Premier League statement said: "As a result of the Premier League’s investigation, it was established that between 2011 and 2018, undisclosed payments by third parties associated with the club were made to players, unregistered agents and other third parties.
"These payments were not disclosed to the football regulatory authorities at the time, including the Premier League. The payments were made for the benefit of Chelsea FC and should have been treated as having been made by the club
"The club has also accepted, among other things, that the making of these payments, as well as the failure to disclose them to the League, constituted a breach of the requirement to act in good faith towards the League."
Chelsea have responded with their own statement, accepting the Premier League's punishment, claiming to have "voluntarily and proactively disclosed to all applicable regulators potential historical rule breaches, including incomplete financial reporting that took place over a decade ago."
They added: "The club welcomes the recognition from the Premier League of its ‘exceptional cooperation’ and that ‘without those voluntary disclosures and the act of self-reporting, a number of the Premier League rule breaches may never have come to the attention of the League’."
Chelsea were fined for financial irregularities by UEFA back in 2023 for "submitting incomplete financial information" for the period between 2012 and 2019, making it the second time in recent years they've had to pay a hefty fee.

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