Real Madrid made history as the first football club to generate over €1 billion annual revenue, according to Deloitte’s latest Money League
Real Madrid was the football club with the highest revenue in the world in the 2023/24 season, according to Deloitte. For the second consecutive year, the Football Money League report places the club in first position with €1.
For a second consecutive year, they topped Deloitte’s Money League, released today. The figures are for last season, which ended with another Champions League title for Real Madrid, enabling them to become the first football club to push through €1billion in annual revenue, earning €1.05bn (£884m; $1.08bn).
Winning both LaLiga and the Champions League last season, Deloitte found Real Madrid had record earnings of €1,045m - beating out Manchester City's €837m.
Real Madrid have become the first football club to generate more than 1bn euros in annual revenue, according to analysis by Deloitte .
Annual analysis by Deloitte profiles the soccer clubs across the globe that generate the highest revenue in a single season. From Real Madrid to Manchester City to Paris Saint-Germain, the biggest clubs in the world all have one thing in common—they bring in revenue worth millions every year.
The Spanish club overtake Manchester City to return to the top in the 2022-23 season after generating €831m. Read more at straitstimes.com.
LaLiga giants top the Football Money League ahead of Manchester City and PSG, as Manchester United climb up to fourth.
The Taylor Swift effect and further revenue away from soccer have helped Los Blancos, with the Miami Dolphins' home game later this year only expected to help keep them at the top.
Spanish giants Real Madrid have made history as the first football club to surpass €1 billion in revenue, securing the top spot in the Deloitte Money League.
Real Madrid leads the Deloitte Football Money League 2025 with over 1 billion euros in revenue. The global top 20 reaches a total of 11,2 billion. Milan, Inter and Juve are present, but the absence from the cups weighs on the Bianconeri.