Revealed: Eye-watering earnings for Arsenal after league success
Arsenal have been crowned the 2025/26 English Premier League champions, and the club's projected earnings are eye-watering.
Arsenal fans – as well as players – celebrated into the early hours of the morning after being crowned the 2025/26 Premier League champions with a game to spare, and which saw the Gunners claim a 14th top-flight championship.
Following Arsenal’s 1-0 win against Burnley on Monday, title rivals Manchester City had to beat Bournemouth to force a final-day showdown for the title. However, a 1-1 draw at the Vitality Stadium saw the team from North London crowned champions.
The silverware sees Mikel Arteta become the first Gunners boss to land English football’s top prize in 22 years, following in the footsteps of Arsene Wenger’s Invincibles who were their last side to win the Premier League after going unbeaten during the 2003/04 campaign.
Big earnings in store for Arsenal
Following their Premier League title win, Arsenal’s total projected payout directly from the league stands between £176 million and £178 million (R3.91 billion-R3.96 billion).
The Premier League distributes its massive commercial and broadcasting wealth using a multi-layered system, ensuring that even the base payout is substantial, while heavily rewarding the champions.
This massive overall total is built from a few different streams. First, just by being in the top flight, every club receives an identical Equal Central Share from the league’s global broadcasting rights, which gives the champions a baseline of R2.15 billion before performance is even factored in.
On top of that baseline, their final position at the top of the log secures them the maximum Merit Payment of R1.18 billion. This performance bonus is handed out on a sliding scale where every single place on the table is worth roughly R57.8 million – meaning that finishing first instead of second banks the club an extra R57.8 million injection.
Big pay day can fuel big transfer spending
Finally, because the champions are a massive draw for broadcasters, they pull in an additional R578 million to R622 million in facility fees, which are the bonuses paid out every time a team is selected for a live UK television slot.
When you combine the baseline broadcast money, the television bonuses, and the top-spot merit shares, the club walks away with just under R4 billion set to be wired into their accounts for lifting the trophy.
Arsenal now have the ‘pull factor’ and plenty of cash to burn if they want to dip into the transfer market after the season.