Chelsea posted the largest pre-tax loss in Premier League history on the same day it was announced that the free-spending London outfit paid player agents laughably more than all their other top-flight rivals.
The club’s finances have been under a white-hot spotlight recently. The Premier League dolled out the largest fine in competition history to punish hidden payments under the previous ownership yet for several clubs that wasn’t a stern enough penalty.
News of these eye-watering losses and expenses will not make Chelsea any more popular among the division’s accountants, and the focus will simply shift towards how the club manages to navigate the Premier League’s regulations going forward.
Biggest Losses in Premier League History
|
Rank / Club |
Year |
Loss |
|---|---|---|
|
1. Chelsea |
2025 |
$350 million |
|
2. Man City |
2011 |
$263 million |
|
3. Chelsea |
2021 |
$208 million |
|
4. Chelsea |
2023 |
$207 million |
|
5. Man Utd |
2022 |
$199 million |
|
6. Chelsea |
2005 |
$187 million |
|
7. Everton |
2020 |
$187 million |
|
8. Man Utd |
2006 |
$184 million |
|
9. Man Utd |
2024 |
$174 million |
|
10. Arsenal |
2021 |
$170 million |
Data via BBC Sport.
By the end of the 2024–25 campaign, Chelsea were left to count the cost of a $350 million (£262 million) loss before taxes are taken into account. This staggering deficit—the largest reported by any Premier League club since the competition’s inception in 1992—was despite a reasonably profitable sporting season.
Enzo Maresca led Chelsea to two titles, winning the relatively minor UEFA Conference League before landing the undoubtedly lucrative Club World Cup last summer. Thanks to that triumph in the heat of the U.S. against Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea won $114.6 million as well as the dubious honor of lifting the trophy alongside President Donald Trump.
In fact, BBC Sport report that Chelsea’s revenue of $654.8 million is the second-highest recorded in club history. The outgoings were simply far larger. Plenty of the money washing out of the club went into the pockets of player agents.
Highest Agent Fees Paid by Premier League Clubs in 2025

|
Rank |
Club |
Fee |
|---|---|---|
|
1. |
Chelsea |
$86.6 million |
|
2. |
Aston Villa |
$51.1 million |
|
3. |
Man City |
$49.7 million |
|
4. |
Liverpool |
$45.1 million |
|
5. |
Arsenal |
$42.8 million |
|
6. |
Man Utd |
$42.3 million |
|
7. |
Wolves |
$34.5 million |
|
8. |
Tottenham |
$28.4 million |
|
9. |
Bournemouth |
$27.8 million |
|
10. |
Newcastle |
$27.0 million |
Data via the Football Association.
Agents are entitled to a slice of transfer fees and bonuses of players being transferred from club to club, yet the exact figure is open to negotiation. It appears as though Chelsea are a soft touch in that regard.
The Blues paid more to agents between February 2024 and February 2025 than Arsenal and Manchester United combined. Chelsea dutifully spent more on transfer fees during this period than any other Premier League club, but only a fraction more than Brighton & Hove Albion. However, the savvy Seagulls spent less than three times what Chelsea did on agents’ fees.
The legendary Ajax and Barcelona manager Johan Cruyff once mused: “The money should be on the pitch. Not in the bank.” It definitely shouldn’t be in the pockets of agents.

















