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July 2026 Football Transfers: Done Deals Tracker Updated

Carlos Mendez
Carlos Mendez
Soccer Correspondent
8:20 PM
SOCCER
July 2026 Football Transfers: Done Deals Tracker Updated
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BBC Football's July 2026 done deals tracker is covering significant signings and departures across the Premier League, Scottish Premiership, EFL and Women's Super League. The key value is confirmation: this is about completed movement, not rumours.

What happened:

Watch the highlights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93HhgVNXRp4

BBC Football has updated its July 2026 done deals coverage, tracking significant signings and departures across the Premier League, Scottish Premiership, English Football League and Women's Super League. The supplied source is a transfer tracker rather than a single-club report, so the main confirmed fact is the scope of the list: completed moves across major men's and women's competitions in Britain.

The important word is "done". In a transfer window crowded with interest, talks and near-agreements, a completed-deals tracker separates official movement from market noise. That makes it useful for tournament planning because confirmed arrivals and exits are the personnel changes that can actually alter squads, depth charts and selection options.

Why it matters:

July is one of the most consequential periods for clubs preparing for a new campaign. A signing can reshape a starting XI, but a departure can be just as important if it removes depth, leadership or tactical flexibility. Across the Premier League, Scottish Premiership, EFL and WSL, the combined effect of those moves is competitive redistribution: some teams add options, others lose continuity, and some are forced into further business.

For fans, the tracker format is particularly valuable because it avoids treating every rumour as equal. A confirmed transfer changes the baseline. A club that has officially sold a player may now have a recruitment gap. A club that has completed an arrival can start judging fit, minutes and role. That is different from speculation, where the range of outcomes remains too wide to draw firm conclusions.

Tournament impact:

The listed competitions sit at different points in the football pyramid, but transfer activity connects them. Premier League spending can create loan opportunities or departures lower down the divisions. EFL clubs may be reshaped by sales, free transfers and squad churn. Scottish Premiership clubs often need to balance domestic ambitions with European qualification demands. WSL moves can shift title, Champions League and survival calculations in a fast-growing market.

The tracker also matters because departures are sometimes underread. Losing a regular starter, squad goalkeeper, rotation midfielder or productive forward can affect fixture congestion and cup selection long before it shows up in league tables. The strongest use of a done-deals list is not just counting names in and out, but asking which roles have changed.

What to watch:

The next layer is club-by-club consequence. Which teams have replaced outgoing players? Which squads still look short in key positions? Which moves are permanent and which are temporary? The supplied source confirms the existence and coverage of the tracker, but individual deal analysis depends on the specific entries inside it.

Confidence:

Confirmed by the BBC source: the July 2026 done deals page tracks significant signings and departures in the Premier League, Scottish Premiership, EFL and Women's Super League. Still needing follow-up: the full list of individual transfers, official club context for each move, and how managers plan to use the players involved.

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