OneFootball
·23 ottobre 2025
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Yahoo sportsOneFootball
·23 ottobre 2025
Football is not just goals and spectacle, but also... salaries!
Every year, major European clubs spend astronomical sums to maintain their champions, and according to Transfermarkt data, the salary budget reveals a lot about how clubs operate in the market and their real economic strengths.
This year there are surprises: Bayern Munich is no longer at the top, and no Italian club is among the top ten most "spendthrift" teams in Europe.
The Blancos look down on everyone: 305 million euros gross in annual salaries for the squad. A monstrous figure that even surpasses the total revenues of many "luxury" clubs.

Right behind, Bayern Munich with 257 million and Manchester City with 252 million. Further back is Barcelona (222M), still dealing with the economic aftermath of recent years but remaining high.
When it comes to leagues, the Premier League has no equal. The 20 English clubs reach a record figure: 2.4 billion euros in salaries. To understand the gap: the English average is 120 million per club, more than Napoli or Roma.

The Spanish Liga follows at a distance (1.44 billion), then Serie A (1.18), Bundesliga (1.11), and Ligue 1 (700M). Numbers that explain why English clubs can repeatedly buy (and pay) talents.
For Serie A fans, the data is not encouraging. No team is in the Top 10:
The gap from the elite is evident: between Inter and Atletico Madrid (10th place) there is almost a 20 million difference, and with English clubs like Arsenal or Chelsea, the gap widens even more.
At the bottom, teams like Lecce and Pisa have the lowest salary budgets, showing how Serie A has become a league polarized between big and small teams.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇮🇹 here.
📸 Aitor Alcalde - 2025 Getty Images









































