Sports
Apr 07, 2026
FA Unveils Plan to Add Four WSL Academy Teams to Tier‑Three League from 2027 with Mid‑Season Split and £1 Million Investment
The Football Association has drafted a confidential proposal to place four Women’s Super League aca…
In a confidential set of proposals, the Football Association (FA) is looking to reshape the Women’s National League (WNL) by admitting four Women’s Super League academy sides into the third tier of the English women’s football pyramid starting in the 2027 season.
The plan also introduces a mid‑season split—mirroring the format used in Scotland—intended to create a more compelling competition and generate greater media and fan engagement.
Accompanying the structural overhaul is an investment package of about £1 million. This includes a £500,000 grant earmarked for prize money at tiers three and four, and a further £500,000 that the FA hopes to secure through a title‑sponsorship deal.
Beyond financial support, the FA intends to enhance legal and medical insurance for clubs using the loan system and to provide limited grants for clubs establishing academies, thereby increasing competitive minutes for emerging talent.
The new third‑tier format would expand from 24 to 28 clubs, split evenly between a northern and a southern division (14 teams each). Each region would host two Pro Game Academies (PGAs) operating under a three‑year licence awarded on the basis of academy strength and the proportion of English talent developed.
After 13 rounds, the league would divide into three groups: an eight‑team WNL Premier (four clubs from each region) and two regional groups of ten. Academy sides would be excluded from the Premier, while the top two Premier teams would earn promotion to the second‑tier WSL2. The bottom three clubs in each regional group would face relegation, meaning PGAs could also be demoted.
Promotion from the fourth tier would involve six clubs, with the runners‑up from the four fourth‑tier divisions contesting playoffs for the final spots.
These proposals follow the FA’s decision last year to abandon a previous expansion that would have placed B teams in tier four—a plan that had secured just under 55% support from 144 surveyed clubs. The current blueprint, still pending board approval, does not reference B teams and emphasizes the goal of enhancing competitiveness, better preparing clubs for the WSL, and attracting more fans and media coverage.
FA officials stressed that the initiative is being developed in full consultation with leagues, clubs, and other stakeholders, with a focus on sustainable growth, professionalism, and expanded development pathways for young English players.
Comparative analysis shows that youth internationals from Spain, the Netherlands, and France typically accrue far more top‑flight minutes in their teens than their English counterparts, underscoring the FA’s urgency to create more high‑level playing opportunities domestically.
The Women’s National League, now in its 35th year, currently sees Burnley leading the northern third tier and Watford crowned champions of the southern division.
#league
#women
#clubs
Read More