Lyon striker Alexandre Lacazette is expected to complete a club-record £45m move to Arsenal on Wednesday having completed a medical.
The Gunners had an initial bid for the 26-year-old France international rejected, but talks continued.
His fee, of up to £52m with add-ons, will surpass the £42.4m Arsenal paid Real Madrid for Mesut Ozil in 2013.
Lacazette, who has won 11 caps for France, was the second-highest scorer in Ligue 1 last season with 28 goals.
His move to north London is likely to be completed later on Wednesday in order for the announcement to fall in line with the French stock market, on which they are listed.
Lacazette scored 129 goals in 275 matches in all competitions for Lyon since breaking into the first team in the 2009-10 campaign.
His league tally last season was bettered by only Paris St-Germain's Edinson Cavani, with 35.
Lacazette has been linked with several top clubs and looked set to join Atletico Madrid before their transfer ban was upheld by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Last week Arsenal chief executive Ivan Gazidis promised fans "top-quality" summer signings during a question-and-answer session.
Left-back Sead Kolasinac, who joined from Schalke, is Arsenal's only recruit since the end of last season.
Analysis
BBC Sport's David Ornstein
The player Arsenal really wanted this summer was Alexandre Lacazette and sources there tell me his arrival is another signal that the club are deadly serious when they say they want to become top-flight champions.
Although breaking the club transfer record does not guarantee anything, acquiring Lacazette proves Arsenal and Wenger can still attract top players, even without Champions League football.
Arsenal do have other targets but whether or not more signings are made is likely to depend on what happens with the likes of Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Jack Wilshere, all of whom are out of contract in a year's time and have been linked with moves away from the Emirates.
Arsenal's first-team squad is currently far too big and players need to leave before any more arrive.
Credit : BBC
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