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Leicester City will be free to sign players in this summer’s transfer window despite being under embargo by the EFL last month.
The EFL imposed a registration embargo on Leicester for allegedly breaching upper loss limits on their PSR forecasts for this season, but the Premier League has no current plans to extend it following their promotion despite being locked in an extraordinary legal battle with the club.
Leicester will officially become a Premier League club at the top-flight’s Annual General Meeting on June 6, effectively triggering the end of the transfer embargo before the summer window opens later in the month.
Leicester are preparing for a busy summer as the EFL forecasts they will need to sell players by June 30 to avoid being accused of breaching PSR regulations this season.
Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall is the most likely to leave amid interest from Brighton, Fulham and Brentford, with the midfielder valued at £30m and, as an Academy product, his transfer fee would immediately be added to the balance sheet as pure profit, while Leicester could also be forced to cash in on local teammates Hamza Choudhury, Sammy Braybrooke and Ben Nelson.
Leicester will be free to sign players over the summer despite EFL transfer embargo
The Premier League has no plans to extend the embargo following the Foxes’ promotion to the top flight
But the club will likely have to sell stars with Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in line to walk away.
Leicester have already been accused of breaching the Premier League’s PSR limits last season, which will lead to a points deduction in the top flight next season, particularly given that any hope of mitigation has been eliminated by their aggressive legal threats. .
Unlike the EFL, the Premier League is not in the habit of imposing embargoes for breaches of the rules before taking a club to an independent commission, although a final decision has not yet been made.
Having secured promotion last week, Leicester are expected to modify their approach and could even abandon their legal challenge in the hope of receiving more lenient treatment from the committee that will hear their case.