There are various reasons why Leicester have lost so much money in previous years, which still leaves them vulnerable now given the three-year assessment period.
They lost nearly ยฃ90m in 2022-23 as the club fell from eighth to 18th, resulting in relegation, but it was also a reduction of about ยฃ30-35m in prize money given finishing positions in the Premier League table are worth about ยฃ3m.
They budgeted for a higher finish, budgets which chief executive Susan Whelan said were “entirely reasonable” given previous top-five finishes.
A lack of European football was another factor, with the club qualifying for the Europa League and going on to reach the Europa Conference League semi-final in 2022.
Significant changes in the management have also been costly with the departure of Brendan Rodgers, along with his backroom staff, in 2023 expensive.
Leicester have handed out big contracts to players and have therefore been unable to move some on and, despite managing to make a ยฃ74.8m profit in player sales in 2022-23, they still lost a huge amount.
The knock-on effect is still restricting them, with current manager Ruud van Nistelrooy only able to spend around ยฃ3m on defender Woyo Coulibaly in January, leaving the Foxes short on the quality needed for a relegation fight.