Information Gathering and Enforcement
Who we are
The Football Governance Act 2025 (the Act) received Royal Assent on 21 July, 2025. The Act establishes the Independent Football Regulator (the IFR).
The IFR’s core statutory objectives are to:
protect and promote the financial soundness of regulated clubs
protect and promote financial resilience of English football
safeguard the heritage of English football
The IFR will have powers to operate a licensing regime, and to monitor and enforce compliance with requirements on financial regulation; fan engagement; club heritage; and will introduce an enhanced club owners, directors and senior executives test.
The IFR will set corporate governance standards, will oversee a number of obligations on clubs protecting club heritage, e.g. stadia sales, changes to badges and kit colours, and will have the power to prohibit regulated clubs from joining competitions where they are not fair and meritocratic, and would threaten the heritage and sustainability of English football.
Establishing the IFR is expected to be complete in the autumn, when the organisation is scheduled to have an independent Board comprising Executive and Non-executive Directors, a Chair and a Chief Executive Officer.
What we are consulting on
This consultation sets out the IFR’s approach to information gathering and enforcement powers. This consultation is primarily procedural and should be read in conjunction with the IFR’s draft guidance on its approach to sanctioning those found to have breached their responsibilities (on which it is also currently consulting).
How to respond
The consolidated consultation document can be accessed here or via the link to the right of this page under 'Documents'.
You can submit your response to the proposals by filling out the survey below.
Accessibility
If you have accessibility requirements relating to our consultation documentation, please get in touch via the Accessibility Requirements page to inform us of your requirements.
Next Steps
This consultation will close on Monday the 6th of October 2025.
The IFR intends to publish the final version of the guidance under section 12(3) and 12(5) of the Act. The guidance will be published on the IFR’s website.
Compliance with government consultation principles
In preparing this consultation, the IFR has taken into account the published government consultation principles, which set out the principles that government departments and other public bodies should adopt when consulting with stakeholders.
Confidentiality
We do not intend to publish any individual responses. Information contained in responses may be used or summarised in public documents. If your response contains sensitive information, please identify it and explain why you consider it sensitive.
Personal Data
We accept the right for responses to remain anonymous and a response that wishes to remain confidential should be appropriately marked. We may contact an individual to discuss their request for confidentiality further and ask for reasons.
We are subject to the rules set out in the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the Data Protection Act (DPA) and the Environmental Information Regulations (EIR).
Section 1 of FOIA gives a general right of access to information held by public authorities, and the Act adds the IFR to the list of ‘public bodies’ which fall within the remit of FOIA.
The EIR requires public authorities to make available on request the environmental information they hold.
EIR (reg. 2(2)) defines “public authority” by direct reference to FOIA. Personal data collected as part of the consultation process will fall within the remit of the DPA.
Section 7(1)(a) defines “public authority” by direct reference to FOIA. Whilst we may publish data about the number of responses we receive, it must not disclose the personal information of any of the respondents during this process.