Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 29th January 2026, 11:13 AM
Global men’s football witnessed an unprecedented surge in transfer spending last year, as clubs collectively shelled out a record $1,308 billion (approximately ₨159,926 billion) on player acquisitions. For the first time in history, annual transfer fees surpassed the $1 trillion mark, according to FIFA’s recently published Global Transfer Report.
The report further revealed that 86,158 international transfers were completed in men’s football during 2025, setting a new record for the highest number of transfers in a single calendar year.
Women’s football also experienced significant growth, albeit on a smaller scale. Last year, 2,440 transfers took place in women’s football, marking a 6.3% increase compared to the previous year. Clubs spent a total of $286 million (around ₨34.948 billion) on these transfers, representing a year-on-year rise of over 80%.
When combining men’s and women’s football across both professional and amateur levels, the total spending on transfers in 2025 reached $1,311 billion (approximately ₨160,293 billion). This represents a more than 50% increase compared to 2024 and a 35.6% rise over the previous record set in 2023.
In men’s professional football, English clubs once again led the world in both spending and revenue. They invested $382 billion in new players while generating $177 billion from player sales. Outside England, only Italian and German clubs crossed the $100 billion mark in spending.
Brazilian clubs dominated the transfer numbers, with 1,190 new players joining and 1,005 players sold within the country’s professional leagues. However, on a financial scale, clubs spent the most on French players globally, with $167 billion (around ₨20,418 billion) allocated to French talent. Brazilian players were second, with clubs spending $121 billion (approximately ₨14,794 billion).
The three clubs with the highest transfer expenditures were all from the English Premier League—Manchester City, Liverpool, and Chelsea. Manchester City overtook Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) to claim the top spot. Notably, no European clubs from the current UEFA top rankings made it into FIFA’s list of the top twenty spenders, with eleven of the top twenty clubs hailing from England.
Key Transfer Spending by Country and Club (2025)
| Country/Club | Spending on New Players (billion $) | Revenue from Player Sales (billion $) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 382 | 177 | Highest spending and revenue |
| Italy | 105 | 65 | Only other league over $100B |
| Germany | 102 | 58 | Strong European league presence |
| Brazil | 121 | N/A | Largest number of transfers |
| France | 167 | 90 | Highest global spend on players |
FIFA’s report underscores the continued growth of football’s global transfer market, with England’s Premier League firmly cemented as the epicentre of both financial power and high-profile player activity.
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