Juventus Reveal UEFA Investigation for Potential Financial Fair Play Breaches; CEO Maurizio Scanavino to Leave
Juventus exceeded UEFA's 60 million euro loss limit by 30 million euros from 2022 to 2025, risking financial penalties and player registration bans.
- On September 18, UEFA informed Juventus that proceedings were opened to investigate possible breaches between 2022 and 2025, and the club will present financial statements on November 7.
- Juventus reported exceeding a €60 million limit from 2022–2025, citing its financial statement, while UEFA's rule caps losses at 60 million euros over three years.
- Previously, Juventus was banned from the 2023-24 Conference League and required to pay €60 million; UEFA warned the probe could lead to "a possible economic sanction... and possible sporting restrictions".
- The club sits fifth in Serie A with 12 points from six matches, and Juventus announced CEO Maurizio Scanavino will step down after three years at the November 7 shareholders' meeting.
- The club has not reported an annual profit since the 2016/2017 season, and Juventus CEO Maurizio Scanavino said, `Three years ago, I accepted this prestigious position at an extremely critical time...`.
40 Articles
40 Articles
UEFA has banned two clubs from European competitions for financial irregularities, while Juventus has confirmed that it is under investigation for a possible penalty. The black and white club published its financial statements for the year ending June 30, 2025, where it was confirmed that on September 18 they were notified of the opening of a procedure by UEFA regarding the parameter of the “Football Earning Rule”. This procedure covers a three-…
The UEFA launched an investigation against the Old Lady for potential violations of financial fair play. The Italian club risks sports and financial sanctions in the spring of 2026.
The Juventus Turin is the subject of an investigation by the UEFA for violations of the rules of fair play-financial which led to a suspension of European competitions in 2023-24.
Ready to get into new financial trouble is Juventus, which UEFA has once again put in its sights.
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