No Premier League clubs have been charged with Profit and Sustainability breaches for the three-year period between 2021-2024.
Clubs who had recorded losses for the first two seasons of the latest three-season cycle were required to submit their accounts for the year ending June 2024 to the Premier League by December 31.
Profitability and Sustainability Rules mean clubs are not allowed to lose more than £105m over three-season rolling periods.
That is reduced by £22m for every season a club spends outside the Premier League during the reporting period.
There was speculation that a number of clubs – most notably Leicester – were in danger of breaching the rules, but all clubs have complied.
Leicester successfully appealed against a points deduction for the period ending 2022/23, arguing that the Premier League could not charge them because they had been relegated to the Championship and were under EFL jurisdiction.
The Premier League has appealed that and an arbitration process is ongoing.
A Leicester statement said: “Issues as to the jurisdiction of the Premier League over Leicester City Football Club in relation to PSR compliance are currently the subject of confidential arbitration proceedings.
“Accordingly, neither the League nor the club will make any further comment at this stage about any aspect of the club’s compliance or otherwise with any of the PSR or related rules, save to say that no complaint has been brought against Leicester by the League for any breach of the PSRs for the period ending season 2023-24.”
Nottingham Forest and Everton were charged and deducted four and eight points respectively a year ago after breaking PSR rules for the period 2020-23.