Real Madrid have become the first football club to generate more than a billion euros (£845m) in revenue in a single year, topping a financial services company’s league.
Winning LaLiga and the Champions League last season, Deloitte said the Spanish club had passed Manchester City to the first position in his football league.
Real Madrid also saw match day revenues increase in 2023/24 – after renovations to the Bernabeu Stadium – doubling to €248m (£209m).
The club has also experienced a 19% construction in the source of advertising income of a new sponsorship of HP Heats and a construction of goods sales, collecting 482 million euros (407 million pounds sterling).
In general, Real Madrid registered 1,045 million euros (883 million sterling pounds) of source of income in the 2023/24 season, which placed it well in front of the city that recorded 837 million euros (707 million pounds sterling ).
In third position, Paris St Germain, the only French team in the top ten most sensible, which recorded a turnover of around £680 million.
Despite completing the seventh place for its worst season in the Premier League, Manchester United took the fourth place in around 650 million, a striker of Bayern Munich at £ 646 million and Barcelona to £ 642 million.
Arsenal were seventh with revenues of £605m, narrowly ahead of Liverpool at £603m. Tottenham Hotspur meanwhile placed ninth at £519m, and Chelsea rounded off the list with £460m in earnings.
Deloitte said taking part in UEFA competitions was vital for club revenues, noting that the Italian side Juventus fell from 11th to 16th in their rankings after being excluded from European fixtures over breaches of financial fair play rules.
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Tim Bridge, main partner of Deloitte Sports Business Group, added: “While the announcement gain dominates the gain of the 10 most sensible clubs in the Silver League, the transmission gains remain for groups at the time in the part of the classification.
“As competitions expand and create more opportunities for streaming and adjustment, they can build more of the clubs’ perspective. “