شرح: تغييرات في قواعد الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز لموسم 2025-2026 حيث تتشدد رابطة الدوري الممتاز في مكافحة إضاعة الوقت وتقدم إمكانية الوصول خلف الكواليس أثناء المباريات

The 2025-26 Premier League season will see major rule changes designed to speed up play and give fans more access than ever before. From an eight-second goalkeeper time limit to cameras entering dressing rooms and stricter referee communication rules, the top flight is clamping down on delays while opening the door to new broadcast experiences.

  • Goalkeepers face strict new rule 
  • Broadcasters gain dressing room access 
  • Only captains permitted to approach referees

شرح: تغييرات في قواعد الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز لموسم 2025-2026 حيث تتشدد رابطة الدوري الممتاز في مكافحة إضاعة الوقت وتقدم إمكانية الوصول خلف الكواليس أثناء المبارياتشرح: تغييرات في قواعد الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز لموسم 2025-2026 حيث تتشدد رابطة الدوري الممتاز في مكافحة إضاعة الوقت وتقدم إمكانية الوصول خلف الكواليس أثناء المبارياتشرح: تغييرات في قواعد الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز لموسم 2025-2026 حيث تتشدد رابطة الدوري الممتاز في مكافحة إضاعة الوقت وتقدم إمكانية الوصول خلف الكواليس أثناء المباريات

ال has introduced a series of new regulations for the 2025-26 campaign. These include a strict limit on how long goalkeepers can hold the ball, increased broadcast access, and tighter rules on player-referee interactions. Several other tweaks, including updated penalty and interference laws, will also be in place.

Goalkeepers will now have a strict eight-second limit to release the ball, with referees giving a visible five-second countdown before awarding a corner to the opposition if the rule is broken. This change is designed to reduce time-wasting during matches. Additionally, broadcasters will get limited dressing room access twice a season, with five days’ notice required. Clubs can refuse access if they are losing the match, but must allow it later in the campaign. The new regulations will mean that only captains can approach referees during games.

A new penalty rule will allow re-takes in certain cases, such as accidental double touches, which fans may have seen at the Euro 2025 final. Interfering with play from off the pitch will also be penalised with an indirect free-kick to the opposition. These changes are part of a wider push by IFAB and the Premier League to improve game flow and sportsmanship.

Fans will get their first look at the new rules when face in the season opener at Anfield. Clubs and players will need to adapt quickly to avoid costly mistakes under the tighter regulations. With both on-pitch discipline and broadcast access under the microscope, the new season promises a fresh look and feel.