As the 2024-25 Premier League season quickly approaches with Championship Sunday on May 25, all 20 teams are almost ready to get their yearly earnings from the PL based on their final standings and television broadcasting agreements, along with other factors.
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Complete Premier League rankings for the 2024-25 season
What did each Premier League team make last season? The 20 teams earned amounts ranging from £175.9 million ($228 million) to £109.7 million ($142.2 million) for being part of the league.
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Schedule for the Premier League 2024-25 season, where to catch live matches
You might be curious about how these statistics were determined? Although we don’t yet have data for the 2024-25 season, we can look at last year’s figures as a helpful indicator of what to anticipate once the present season concludes.
(Figures for the 2023-24 season; present exchange rate is £1 equivalent to $1.30)
(See Merit Payment columns – UK & International)
Manchester City secured £56.4 million ($73.1 million based on current exchange rates) for clinching the championship, marking their fourth consecutive victory during the 2023-24 season. Following this, every team received £2.8 million ($3.6 million) fewer than the one ranked just ahead of them, starting with runner-ups Arsenal who got £53.6 million ($69.5 million), down to bottom-ranked Sheffield United which garnered £2.8 million ($3.6 million).
For the 2023-24 season, every Premier League team was awarded £31.2 million ($40.4 million) through domestic broadcast agreements and £55.7 million ($72.2 million) via international broadcast deals, adding up to a total of £86.7 million ($112.4 million).
Each of the 20 teams also got £8.2 million ($10.6 million) from centralized commercial revenues, which pushed the evenly distributed amount up to £94.9 million ($123 million).
Clubs additionally earn extra broadcast income individually (
facility fees column
According to how many times their matches were aired in the UK last season, Arsenal had the highest exposure with 31 broadcasts, earning them an extra £26.9 million ($34.9 million) from broadcasting revenues. Conversely, Burnley appeared only 10 times and garnered £9.3 million ($12.1 million).
As title holders, Manchester City barely outpaced Arsenal in overall Premier League earnings with Arsenal’s additional £2.5 million in facility fees falling slightly short of the £2.8 million gap in merit payments.