London Edition Sunday 5 July 2026
Football Economy The Business of the Beautiful Game
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Football Finance

How football clubs earn, spend, fail and get regulated — the entry point to the publication's coverage of the game's economics.

Football finance sits at the junction of sport, entertainment and capital markets — a €30bn+ European industry in which most participants lose money. This page is the entry point to the publication’s coverage: how clubs earn, what they spend, who owns them, and the regulatory machinery that polices the gap.

How Football Clubs Earn

Club revenue divides into three streams. Broadcasting dominates in England — the Premier League’s domestic and international cycles are each worth over £3bn per season. Commercial revenue leads at the global giants: kit deals, sponsorship and stadium naming rights scale with brand reach rather than results. Matchday is the smallest but most stable line. The mix defines a club’s risk profile: broadcast-dependent clubs live and die by league position; commercially led clubs can survive bad seasons.

Where the Money Goes

Wages consume 60-70% of revenue at a typical top-flight club, and transfer-fee amortisation — the accounting spread of fees over contract length — has become the second-largest cost line. Amortisation is also where financial engineering concentrates: long contracts shrink annual charges, which is why regulators capped amortisation periods at five years after Chelsea’s eight-year deals.

Ownership Models

European football’s capital structures span member-owned giants (Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern’s 75% e.V.), listed companies (Dortmund, Juventus, Manchester United), sovereign-wealth vehicles (Manchester City, Newcastle, PSG), US private capital (Liverpool, Arsenal, Chelsea, Milan), and the multi-club holding groups that increasingly connect them. The Club Finance Database profiles each model through its leading examples.

Regulation: From FFP to Squad-Cost Rules

UEFA’s Financial Fair Play, introduced in 2011, evolved in 2022 into squad-cost controls: clubs may spend at most 70% of revenue on wages, transfers and agents. England’s Profitability and Sustainability Rules (PSR) cap losses at £105m over three seasons, with Everton and Nottingham Forest’s 2023/24 points deductions the first hard enforcement. An independent English regulator, created by the Football Governance Act, now oversees club licensing, ownership tests and financial sustainability across the top five tiers.

Failure: Administration and Insolvency

English football has produced more than sixty insolvency events since 1992 — the subject of much of this publication’s historical record, from why administration became endemic to club case studies such as Portsmouth, Coventry City and Rangers. The pattern is consistent: revenue assumptions built on promotion or survival, wage commitments that outlive them, and an owner-benefactor whose support ends.