The Premier League is to bring in a new owners' charter to stop future attempts to join a breakaway Super League.
It follows Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool, Arsenal, Manchester City and Tottenham agreeing to join the failed European Super League last month.
All owners will have to sign up to the new rule "committing them to the core principles" of the league with breaches punished by "significant" sanctions.
The Football Association said an inquiry into the six clubs has started.
- European Super League: A seismic, pivotal week in football
- There must be consequences for the six ESL clubs - ex-Premier League chief
"The actions of a few clubs cannot be allowed to create such division and disruption," the Premier League said.
"We are determined to establish the truth of what happened and hold those clubs accountable for their decisions and actions."
The Football Association added: "We wrote to all of the clubs to formally request all relevant information and evidence regarding their participation.
"Once we have the required information, we will consider what appropriate steps to take."
The Super League proposal, which also included some of Europe's biggest clubs, collapsed within 72 hours after widespread criticism from fans, players and governing bodies and politicians.
There have been various calls for sanctions against the clubs, including points deductions, relegation and bans from European competitions.
The executives at the six clubs involved in the collapsed breakaway have been forced to resign from advisory roles at the Premier League.
Most of the clubs apologised and Manchester United's executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward resigned.
In its statement the Premier League said it would also introduce "additional rules and regulation to ensure the principles of the Premier League and open competition are protected".
Both the FA and the English top-flight said it is seeking help from the government to bring in legislation to protect the football pyramid and "the integrity of the football community".
"The events of the last two weeks have challenged the foundations and resolve of English football," the Premier League said.
"These measures are designed to stop the threat of breakaway leagues in the future."
The Premier League also said it "recognises the strength of feeling" among fans but urged protests to remain peaceful.
It follows the protest by Manchester United fans on Sunday which resulted in two police officers being injured and caused the club's match against Liverpool to be postponed.
Latest Stories
-
Private citizen donates patrol vehicle to Nkawie Police to boost crime prevention
8 minutes -
Gov’t has worked hard to stabilise exchange rate, it’s time to lower prices – Finance Minister tells businesses
11 minutes -
GJA orders re-run of Ashanti Regional Chairperson elections
16 minutes -
Gov’t to deploy AI at ports to curb revenue leakages – Finance Minister
18 minutes -
NPA scandal: Two more co-accused granted bail after meeting requirements
32 minutes -
Gov’t launches forensic audit of stalled projects following loan discrepancies – Finance Minister
33 minutes -
Minority Caucus demands repeal of L.I. 2462 as galamsey threat deepens
34 minutes -
Full text: 2025 Mid-Year Budget Review presented by Finance Minister
44 minutes -
State actors shielding galamsey networks – Minority Caucus alleges
45 minutes -
Gov’t targets completion of 24 stalled projects by end of 2028 – Finance Minister
48 minutes -
2025 Mid-Year Budget Review: This is the Reset Mahama promised – Ato Forson
48 minutes -
We see you, we hear you and we’re working for you – Ato Forson to Ghanaians
1 hour -
Ghana deserves better than B- – Finance Minister tells rating agencies
1 hour -
‘Inshallah, Mahama will deliver’ – Ato Forson assures Ghanaians
1 hour -
Ghana’s economic confidence rebuilt in under 200 days – Finance Minister Ato Forson
1 hour