Aleksander Ceferin is the sole candidate for the UEFA presidency at its Congress in April.
It will be a third term in office for the Slovenian, who was first elected in 2016 after previous incumbent Michel Platini lost an appeal against a ban for ethics breaches.
Ceferin has faced a number of challenges during his tenure, in particular the formation of a European Super League in April 2021 which presented an existential threat to UEFA.
However, the ESL quickly collapsed, and a non-binding European Court of Justice opinion published in December supported UEFA's right to veto competitions wishing to operate within its jurisdiction.
Ceferin has also overseen major changes to Europe’s men’s club competitions, with new expanded formats finally agreed in May last year, to start in 2024.
UEFA also confirmed Football Association chair Debbie Hewitt will challenge Irish Football Association president David Martin for the British vice-presidency position on the FIFA Council at the Congress in Lisbon.
Hewitt became the first female chair of the FA in its near 160-year existence when she started in her role a year ago.
Meanwhile agents' fees will be capped from October under new FIFA regulations which start to come into force from Monday.
A cap on all service fees will limit agents to earning three per cent of a player's total contracted salary when an agent is representing a player, three per cent of that salary when an agent is representing the buyer and six per cent of that salary when an agent is representing a player and a buyer.
An agent representing a player or buyer can earn up to five per cent of the contracted salary if the player's remuneration is less than $200,000 US a year.
An agent representing a selling club can earn a maximum of 10 per cent of the transfer fee. Payments to agents would be issued via the new FIFA Clearing House.
Triple representation - where an agent represents a player, buyer and seller, is outlawed in the new regulations, and so too is dual representation except where the agent represents the player and the buying club.
The FIFA Council approved the new FIFA Football Agent Regulations (FFAR) at its meeting in Doha on 16 December, but it was overshadowed by Gianni Infantino's announcement on the same day about plans for an expanded Club World Cup to start in 2025.
The regulations also include a requirement for agents to be licensed.