2025/26
Window closedConfirmed moves from the most recent summer and winter windows across Europe's top divisions and MLS.
- Transfers
- 3,219
- Total spend
- £6bn
- Biggest deal
- £124m
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The Soccer Transfers page provides a comprehensive overview of player movements across the global football market. From confirmed signings and completed deals to developing transfer rumours, this page centralises key transfer activity in one place. Users can track player arrivals and departures, transfer fees, loan agreements, and contract expirations across major domestic leagues and international competitions.
Transfers play a crucial role in shaping team performance, squad depth, and seasonal ambitions. Whether it is a record-breaking signing, a strategic loan move, or a last-minute deadline day deal, staying informed about transfer activity offers valuable context for match analysis and long-term team development.
Understanding transfer activity also helps provide context around tactical adjustments, squad rebuilding phases and financial strategies within clubs.
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The current and previous two windows, with confirmed moves across the Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga, MLS and Rest of Europe.
Confirmed moves from the most recent summer and winter windows across Europe's top divisions and MLS.
Full archive of confirmed moves, loans and major fees from the 2024/25 campaign across the major leagues.
Full archive of confirmed moves, loans and major fees from the 2023/24 campaign across the major leagues.
|
|
PLAYER
|
COUNTRY
|
FROM
|
TO
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10-2026 |
Neymar Forward |
Barcelona |
PSG |
223,000,000 EUR | |
| 07-2018 |
Kylian Mbappé Forward |
Monaco |
PSG |
180,000,000 EUR | |
| 08-2017 |
Ousmane Dembélé Forward |
Borussia Dortmund |
Barcelona |
148,000,000 EUR | |
| 09-2025 |
Alexander Isak Forward |
Newcastle United |
Liverpool |
144,000,000 EUR | |
| 01-2018 |
Philippe Coutinho Midfielder |
Liverpool |
Barcelona |
135,000,000 EUR | |
| 07-2019 |
João Félix Forward |
Benfica |
Atletico Madrid |
127,200,000 EUR | |
| 07-2023 |
Jude Bellingham Midfielder |
Borussia Dortmund |
Real Madrid |
127,000,000 EUR | |
| 06-2025 |
Florian Wirtz Midfielder |
Bayer Leverkusen |
Liverpool |
125,000,000 EUR | |
| 01-2023 |
Enzo Fernández Forward |
Benfica |
Chelsea |
121,000,000 EUR | |
| 07-2019 |
Eden Hazard Forward |
Chelsea |
Real Madrid |
120,800,000 EUR |
Older windows are preserved in full for research, historical comparison and long-form analysis. All league pages remain crawlable and indexed.
Roma
Genoa
Stephan El Shaarawy
midfielder
Genoa
SSC Napoli
Seydou Fini
forward
SSC Napoli
Genoa
Nosa Edward Obaretin
defender
Real Madrid
Ajax
Daniel Ceballos
midfielder
FC Porto
Galatasaray
Deniz Gül
forward
Casa Pia
Rayo Vallecano
Jeremy Livolant
defender
Free agent
Real Madrid
Ibrahima Konaté
defender
PSV Eindhoven
Bayern Munich
Ismael Saibari
midfielder
Inter
Real Madrid
Denzel Dumfries
defender
Darmstadt
B. Mönchengladbach
Isac Lidberg
forwardTransfer rules are not uniform across football’s major leagues.
FIFA sets the overall framework, but each competition controls its own registration windows, squad rules, and financial regulations. Here is how the five leagues that drive the global transfer market actually operate.
*Editorial Note: Specific transfer window dates shift slightly from season to season across all leagues. The framework below covers the structural rules, which are stable.
For exact opening and closing dates in any given season, the relevant league’s official website is the most reliable source.
The Premier League runs two transfer windows per season.
The summer window typically opens around 1 June and closes on or around 1 September. As mentioned above, the exact dates are confirmed annually and can shift slightly based on calendar and competition schedules.
The winter window opens on 1 January and closes on or around 1-2 February. Clubs can only register new signings during these periods, though they remain free to sell players to leagues where the window is still open after England’s has closed.
Each club may register a squad of up to 25 players aged 21 or over.
At least eight must qualify as homegrown. What does that mean? Homegrown is defined as any player, regardless of nationality, registered with a club affiliated to the FA or Football Association of Wales for at least three full seasons before their 21st birthday. Under-21 players are exempt from the 25-man limit entirely.
Moreover, emergency goalkeeper loans can be approved outside the standard window in exceptional circumstances, subject to league approval.
Serie A follows the standard European calendar, with the summer window opening on 1 July and the winter window running through January into early February.
Italian clubs operate within the same broad timeframe as other major European leagues, with no significant deviation from the shared continental deadline.Squad registration is based on a 25-player limit for players over a set age threshold, with younger players registered separately and not counted against it.
Clubs must include a minimum number of homegrown players within the 25, which is split between players developed at the club itself and players trained elsewhere within the Italian football system.
The requirement is typically eight homegrown players in total:
This structure gives Serie A clubs a degree of squad-building flexibility while maintaining a development obligation across the system.
La Liga’s registration windows align with the European calendar.
As above, summer from 1 July to around 1 September, winter through January. What sets La Liga apart is its Financial Fair Play enforcement mechanism, which operates through a club-specific economic control system.
Each club is assigned an individual squad cost limit calculated from revenues, operating costs, and existing debt. This limit determines how much a club can spend on wages and amortized transfer fees.
Critically, clubs must remain within their assigned limit to register new signings, regardless of whether the transfer window is open. A club that exceeds its cost limit cannot register new players until its financial position improves, either through increased revenue, reduced costs, or player sales.
The limit is not uniform across the league, however, which remains a big dispute in the Spanish football community. The gap between the top clubs and the bottom of the division can be substantial, and this directly shapes how clubs approach the market. Registration restrictions involving high-profile clubs in recent seasons have demonstrated how strictly this system is enforced.
First-team squads are capped at 25 registered senior players, with youth players registered under separate rules.
The Bundesliga operates summer and winter windows that closely align with the standard European calendar. Exact closing times are confirmed by the DFL (Deutsche Fußball Liga) each season.
The defining structural feature of German football is the 50+1 rule, which requires that the members’ association of a club retains majority voting rights. External investors can hold stakes but cannot acquire controlling influence over most clubs. This limits the kind of ownership-driven spending that has become common in the Premier League, and shapes how German clubs approach the transfer market.
The result is a greater structural reliance on player development and financially sustainable recruitment than in some other top leagues.
A small number of clubs hold long-standing exemptions. Bayer Leverkusen and TSG Hoffenheim are the most prominent ones. However, the rule applies across the majority of the division.
Major League Soccer operates on a different seasonal calendar to European football, which means its transfer windows do not align with the summer and winter cycles most fans are used to.
There are two registration windows per season.
The Primary Transfer Window runs from late January through late April. The Secondary Transfer Window runs from late July through late August. Exact dates are confirmed by the league annually and have shifted in recent seasons. The secondary window in particular has moved later to better align with the global market.
Different transaction types, including loans, trades, and free agent signings, may follow separate internal deadlines within each window.
The salary structure is the most significant difference from European football.
MLS operates a salary budget. There is a cap on how much each club can spend on its senior roster. For 2025 this figure was set at $5,950,000 per club, and it increases annually. This is not a hard ceiling in the traditional sense. The MLS clubs have access to allocation money pools and other mechanisms that allow them to spend beyond the base figure in specific circumstances.
Each club can designate up to three players, referred to as Designated Players, whose full compensation exceeds the maximum salary budget charge. Only a fixed portion of a Designated Player’s salary counts against the cap; the remainder is the club’s own cost above the line.
This mechanism allows clubs to sign high-profile players while maintaining competitive balance across the league.
Clubs are also limited to eight international roster slots on the senior roster. Players beyond that threshold must be US or Canadian citizens. Players developed through a club’s own academy are known as Homegrown Players. These players benefit from specific roster and budget advantages that make them easier and cheaper to sign than external recruits, though they are not entirely exempt from all financial rules.
All confirmed transfer data on SoccerNews is sourced from official club announcements, league governing bodies and verified third-party providers. A transfer is only listed as confirmed once it has been publicly announced by at least one of the clubs involved.
Transfer fees displayed are in the currency reported at time of announcement. Where a fee is not publicly disclosed, the deal is listed as Undisclosed. Loan moves are flagged separately. Historical data from 2007/08 onwards has been manually verified and cross-referenced against official records.
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