Champions League bosses may follow the Premier League’s lead by putting a cap on away ticket prices.

In 2016, clubs in the top flight of English football voted to implement a £30 cap on away ticket prices in domestic competition - a cap which has stayed ever since.

Now the attention has turned to European competition after protests by fans - including when Bayern Munich came to Anfield and unfurled a banner to highlight unfair ticket prices.

Fans hold protest banners prior to the UEFA Champions League Round of 16 First Leg match between Liverpool and FC Bayern Munich

Both sets of supporters spread the signs across both sections of the lower Anfield Road end just after the 50-minute mark to rapturous applause from the rest of the crowd as both teams faced off in the  Champions League .

The banners read: "Away ticket: LFC £48. FCB 55€.

"Th€ gr€€d knows no £imits.

"Twenty is plenty."

The Daily Mail report that UEFA could soon follow suit and put a cap on away ticket prices just as the Premier League does.

They say that a working party, set up to investigate the issue of pricing in the Champions League was set up last year and has been meeting this season.

The group includes Bayern Munich, Paris Saint-Germain and Liverpool, along with representatives from the European Club Association and UEFA.

Findings will be presented to UEFA’s Club Competition Committee ahead of UEFA’s Executive Committee meeting in Baku, Azerbaijan, where a cap could be introduced.

Four months ago UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin spoke on the issue and said: “We know about the problem. It would be good to do something to cap prices.”