FIFA has formally approved a landmark reform that will see players receive a mandatory five percent share of their own transfer fees, a right previously only guaranteed in Spain. The changes, which follow a comprehensive agreement with global players’ union FIFPro, are scheduled to take effect on January 1, 2027, and will reshape the economic and legal dynamics of professional football worldwide.
Under the new regulations, all players will have a recognized financial stake in the economic value generated by their own move. For players earning an annual salary below or equivalent to €150,000, the five percent payment is mandatory and must be paid directly by the selling club. Higher earners are also entitled to the five percent, though the exact legal mechanism for their share may be subject to individual contract negotiations or local regulations. Players have the option to partially waive this right, but the waiver is strictly limited: the final percentage cannot fall below either the player’s fixed remuneration for the final year of their contract or 2.5 percent of the total fixed transfer compensation, whichever is higher.
The agreement also introduces a series of additional protections and structural changes:
· Mandatory release clauses will become a standard feature in all player contracts, guaranteeing free movement and providing clear exit mechanisms.
· Abusive practices such as isolating players, withholding passports, or forcing them to train alone are now expressly prohibited.
· A $20 million fund has been established to assist players whose clubs fail to meet their financial obligations.
· A Global Social Dialogue Platform has been created, giving FIFPRO an official seat alongside FIFA, World Leagues, and the European Club Association in future decision-making.
FIFPRO hailed the agreement as “a turning point” in football governance, emphasizing that “players will no longer simply be subject to the rules that govern their careers — they will shape them”. The memorandum of understanding between the two bodies will remain in effect until 2031.
These reforms stem from two years of negotiations, prompted in part by the European Court of Justice’s Diarra ruling in October 2024, which found certain aspects of FIFA’s transfer rules incompatible with EU law. As part of the agreement, FIFPRO and its member associations have agreed to withdraw all pending litigation against FIFA. The new regulations will come into force on January 1, 2027, meaning the upcoming summer 2026 transfer window will still operate under the existing rules.




