Barca Universal
·7 février 2026
Barcelona will not pay any compensation to the Super League after exit

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Yahoo sportsBarca Universal
·7 février 2026

Earlier today, FC Barcelona officially announced that they were withdrawing from the European Super League project.
Having been one of the only two last-standing teams in the project, which is a brainchild of Real Madrid president Florentino Perez, the Blaugrana opted to sever ties with the proposed breakaway competition.
Now, according to SPORT, Barcelona will not have to pay any financial compensation to the Super League for leaving the project.
Since the creation of the competition, it had been reported that there was an exit clause that could amount to €300 million for founding clubs that decided to sever ties with the project.
Given Barcelona’s current financial situation, that figure would have made any unilateral withdrawal virtually unviable. However, that penalty will not be applied.
According to sources consulted within the club, Joan Laporta had reached an agreement that explicitly allowed Barcelona to leave the project without facing any financial sanction when the time came, a condition that was essential for the Blaugrana to take the final step.

Barcelona have walked away from the Super League. (Photo by THOMAS COEX/AFP via Getty Images)
The agreement is based on the founding statutes of the European Super League, which allowed the Catalans to rely on a clause stating that if more than 70% of the founding clubs had already left the competition, as is the case at present, no payment would be required.
Sources from the Super League itself have confirmed that no amount will be claimed from Barcelona, accepting the current scenario following the club’s institutional rapprochement with UEFA.
In fact, officials from the new competition’s offices were already expecting the move by Laporta when, last November, he did not join the lawsuit filed by Real Madrid and A22 Sports Management against the European governing body, valued at €4.5 billion.
That said, Miguel Galan, president of CENAFE, points out that the club would lose the €4.6 million invested in the form of a shareholding in the project.
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