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SportTuesday, June 30, 2026

Juventus Agrees €20m Settlement with UEFA After Breaching Financial Rules

The Italian club must cut squad costs and meet annual targets to avoid a further €14m fine, as UEFA sanctions 14 teams for financial breaches.

UEFA has imposed a €20 million fine on Juventus and restricted the club’s ability to register players for European competition after the Italian side breached the governing body’s football earnings rule. The sanction, announced on Tuesday, stems from an accumulated loss of €381 million over the three-year monitoring period ending in 2025, far exceeding the permitted €60 million deficit. Under a three-year settlement agreement, Juventus will pay €6 million unconditionally, with a further €14 million suspended provided the club meets a series of intermediate financial targets and achieves full compliance by the 2028/29 season.

The breach was exacerbated by the 2023-24 campaign, when Juventus was excluded from UEFA competitions and recorded a €199 million shortfall. Italian financial analysts note that the settlement requires the club to demonstrate progressive improvement in its accounts, with the potential for early exit from the regime if targets are met ahead of schedule. The club itself has stated it expects to respect the parameters “with adequate margin,” though the agreement also imposes an immediate sporting constraint: when submitting its squad list for the Europa League in August, the total cost of the roster—including wages and amortisation—must be at least one euro lower than the list filed last February.

The Juventus case is part of a wider enforcement wave. UEFA’s Club Financial Control Body sanctioned 14 clubs in total, applying both the football earnings rule and the squad cost ratio, which caps spending on players and coaches at 70% of revenue. In Brazil, coverage highlighted the breadth of the penalties, noting that English clubs Aston Villa (€22.5m fine), Chelsea (€3m), Newcastle (€3m plus a separate €10m for earnings-rule breach), and Nottingham Forest (€2.5m) were all punished, alongside France’s Strasbourg (€25m) and Nice (€2m), and Turkey’s Fenerbahçe (€7m). Italian media focused on the domestic impact: Fiorentina was fined €6m for exceeding the squad cost ratio, while Bologna and Napoli also breached the threshold but escaped sanctions by offsetting the excess with surpluses from previous years.

For Juventus, the path to compliance runs through cost-cutting and player trading. The expiry of Dušan Vlahović’s contract will remove roughly €40m in annual wages and amortisation, and the club aims to trim overall costs by 5–10% by 2026-27. Chief executive Carnevali is targeting €100m in gains from the sale of players whose market value exceeds their book value—a list that includes Khéphren Thuram, Andrea Cambiaso, Pierre Kalulu, Federico Gatti, and Fabio Miretti, though Kenan Yıldız is considered off-limits. These proceeds are intended to compensate for the absence of Champions League prize money and to fund the summer transfer campaign.

The settlement agreement runs through the 2027-28 financial year, with the ultimate deadline for full compliance set at the end of the 2028/29 season. Should Juventus fail to meet the agreed milestones, the suspended €14m fine becomes payable and further sanctions—including additional squad restrictions or even exclusion from European competitions—could follow. The immediate test arrives in August, when the club must deliver a leaner squad list to UEFA, a tangible first step in a three-year financial rehabilitation.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

20%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press
PragmatismSkepticism

Juventus has been fined €20 million and must adhere to a three-year financial recovery plan. The club's past financial irregularities are being addressed through regulatory action. This is a necessary step to restore fiscal responsibility in Italian football.

Latin American press
DetachmentPragmatism

Juventus was fined €20 million and agreed to a three-year financial recovery plan. The club's financial situation is being addressed through a structured plan. This is a business story about a major football club's financial restructuring.

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Upd. 12:22 AM3 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Juventus Agrees €20m Settlement with UEFA After Breaching Financial Rules

The Italian club must cut squad costs and meet annual targets to avoid a further €14m fine, as UEFA sanctions 14 teams for financial breaches.

UEFA has imposed a €20 million fine on Juventus and restricted the club’s ability to register players for European competition after the Italian side breached the governing body’s football earnings rule. The sanction, announced on Tuesday, stems from an accumulated loss of €381 million over the three-year monitoring period ending in 2025, far exceeding the permitted €60 million deficit. Under a three-year settlement agreement, Juventus will pay €6 million unconditionally, with a further €14 million suspended provided the club meets a series of intermediate financial targets and achieves full compliance by the 2028/29 season.

The breach was exacerbated by the 2023-24 campaign, when Juventus was excluded from UEFA competitions and recorded a €199 million shortfall. Italian financial analysts note that the settlement requires the club to demonstrate progressive improvement in its accounts, with the potential for early exit from the regime if targets are met ahead of schedule. The club itself has stated it expects to respect the parameters “with adequate margin,” though the agreement also imposes an immediate sporting constraint: when submitting its squad list for the Europa League in August, the total cost of the roster—including wages and amortisation—must be at least one euro lower than the list filed last February.

The Juventus case is part of a wider enforcement wave. UEFA’s Club Financial Control Body sanctioned 14 clubs in total, applying both the football earnings rule and the squad cost ratio, which caps spending on players and coaches at 70% of revenue. In Brazil, coverage highlighted the breadth of the penalties, noting that English clubs Aston Villa (€22.5m fine), Chelsea (€3m), Newcastle (€3m plus a separate €10m for earnings-rule breach), and Nottingham Forest (€2.5m) were all punished, alongside France’s Strasbourg (€25m) and Nice (€2m), and Turkey’s Fenerbahçe (€7m). Italian media focused on the domestic impact: Fiorentina was fined €6m for exceeding the squad cost ratio, while Bologna and Napoli also breached the threshold but escaped sanctions by offsetting the excess with surpluses from previous years.

For Juventus, the path to compliance runs through cost-cutting and player trading. The expiry of Dušan Vlahović’s contract will remove roughly €40m in annual wages and amortisation, and the club aims to trim overall costs by 5–10% by 2026-27. Chief executive Carnevali is targeting €100m in gains from the sale of players whose market value exceeds their book value—a list that includes Khéphren Thuram, Andrea Cambiaso, Pierre Kalulu, Federico Gatti, and Fabio Miretti, though Kenan Yıldız is considered off-limits. These proceeds are intended to compensate for the absence of Champions League prize money and to fund the summer transfer campaign.

The settlement agreement runs through the 2027-28 financial year, with the ultimate deadline for full compliance set at the end of the 2028/29 season. Should Juventus fail to meet the agreed milestones, the suspended €14m fine becomes payable and further sanctions—including additional squad restrictions or even exclusion from European competitions—could follow. The immediate test arrives in August, when the club must deliver a leaner squad list to UEFA, a tangible first step in a three-year financial rehabilitation.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 3 languages

20%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral17%
Critical83%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press
PragmatismSkepticism

Juventus has been fined €20 million and must adhere to a three-year financial recovery plan. The club's past financial irregularities are being addressed through regulatory action. This is a necessary step to restore fiscal responsibility in Italian football.

Latin American press
DetachmentPragmatism

Juventus was fined €20 million and agreed to a three-year financial recovery plan. The club's financial situation is being addressed through a structured plan. This is a business story about a major football club's financial restructuring.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

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