Brighton, Chelsea, Liverpool and West Ham will be able to allow fans into their stadiums for their first Premier League matches in December under the new tier system in England to tackle the spread of coronavirus.
Those clubs are within tier two areas, meaning if the clubs wish to they can welcome in up to 2,000 fans.
Those would be the first top-flight matches to be attended by fans since the Covid-19 outbreak took hold in March.
The Premier League is yet to confirm the scheduling for matches to be played over the weekend of 5 and 6 December.
Brighton will host Southampton, Chelsea are at home to Leeds, champions Liverpool take on Wolves at Anfield, while West Ham could welcome fans to the London Stadium for the visit of Manchester United.
The other six matches will be played in tier three areas, where fans are still not allowed.
EFL chairman Rick Parry said his competition was considering whether to switch next Tuesday's matches to Wednesday if any of the home clubs were able to allow fans in after the lockdown period ends.
Of the games to be played on Tuesday, Bournemouth’s Championship match against Preston could welcome fans if it is pushed back 24 hours.
So too could QPR’s match against Bristol City.
In League One, AFC Wimbledon, in tier two, would be allowed supporters in for the visit of Peterborough if the game is rescheduled.
Crewe could too for the match against Swindon, as could Oxford (against Ipswich), Northampton (against Fleetwood) and Plymouth (against Rochdale).
In League Two, games at Colchester, Forest Green and Harrogate would be able to allow fans in if they were moved to 2 December.
The UK government had been set to allow supporters into sports venues from 1 October, but scrapped the plans after a rise in coronavirus infection rates.