• Club has until end of the week to agree sanctions • City are one of nine clubs to have broken FFP rules

Manchester City are still a long way off agreeing a settlement with Uefa over sanctions for breaking financial fair play rules, it can be disclosed.

The club have until the end of the week to agree to the sanctions or face the case being handed to a panel for a non-negotiable decision. City are one of nine European clubs, also including Paris St-Germain who are being dealt with for rule breaches, and it is understood they are one of those furthest from reaching an agreement.

The initial settlement offer made to City included financial restrictions on their Champions League squad for next season, and possibly a cut in the size of it, as well as a heavy fine.

Neither City nor Uefa would comment but it is understood the club have been negotiating forcefully for a significant reduction in that sanction but have been struggling to make progress. The risk, however, is that if they are unable to agree a deal with Uefa then they could face even stiffer sanctions from the European game's club financial control board's adjudicatory panel.

No club is expected to be excluded from the Champions League for breaching the spending limits, the maximum possible sanction. Both Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain are believed to have fallen foul of the FFP rules with sponsorship deals related to each clubs' owners.

The Abu Dhabi-owned City have a £40m a year deal with Etihad airways, while the Qatar-owned PSG have a back-dated deal with the Qatar Tourist Authority which is worth up to €200m (£165m) a year.

Arsenal's manager Arsène Wenger said last week Uefa needs to show it means business over FFP. "There are rules to apply for the financial fair play," he commented. "If you don't respect them, you have to apply the rules. One of the rules is that normally you should be banned for the excess of the financial amount that is not justified, that is if you are £100m overboard, you should be punished for £100m of your wages bill in the Champions League."