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What Happens Now at Relegated West Ham?

Posted on May 25, 2026, updated on May 25, 2026

West Ham’s relegation from the Premier League means the club now faces a major reset: a likely squad clear-out, tighter spending, uncertainty over head coach Nuno Espirito Santo, and a tough attempt to bounce straight back up from the Championship.

After 14 years in the top flight, the club is heading into a period of financial and footballing strain. West Ham’s revenue is expected to fall sharply, by around 50% to 60%, while their latest accounts already showed a £104m loss, so player sales and wage cuts are almost certain.

Nuno’s future

West Ham would prefer to keep Nuno Espirito Santo for next season because they want some stability, but his own appetite for a Championship campaign is unclear. He has avoided saying anything definitive about his future, and the club may need to act quickly if he decides not to stay.

Players in and out

Jarrod Bowen is the main player West Ham hope to keep, and he has already signalled that he wants to help the club get back to the Premier League. Beyond him, there will almost certainly be departures, with some players on relegation clauses that cut wages by as much as 50%, and others — including Mateus Fernandes and El Hadji Malick Diouf — viewed as possible sales to generate profit.

Several recent signings have not delivered value, which makes them difficult to move on from. West Ham now need to balance the books while also building a squad capable of competing for promotion, which is a difficult combination in one summer.

Financial reality

The club’s financial picture is bad, but the new EFL squad cost rules may soften the blow compared with what relegation once meant. West Ham’s income will still be much higher than most Championship clubs, giving them a potential edge if they spend carefully and avoid repeating the mistakes of recent recruitment.

The club has also already admitted that relegation would require “more significant mitigating actions,” including further player disposals and wage savings. That means the rebuild is not optional — it is already underway.

Bigger rebuild

The wider challenge is cultural as well as financial. Supporters are angry after years of frustration and feel the club wasted the windfall from player sales and European success, so the next phase has to repair trust as much as results. If West Ham can keep Bowen, settle the coaching situation, and make smarter signings, they still have the resources to mount a serious promotion push.

This is a damaging setback, but not necessarily a permanent one. West Ham’s next season will be about proving they can turn a collapse into a quick recovery.

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