The 23 most expensive footballers in the world

Insure4Sport Logo

Like it or
loathe it—money has a colossal impact on football, both on and off the pitch.

While ‘old-school’ football fans will tell you that passion, hard work and grit were what once won you success, it often boils down to which clubs have the fattest wallet and hence the most expensive footballers nowadays.

With
sponsorships, TV and advertising revenue and player wages at an all-time high, money
dominates football whether we like it or not—especially in some of the world’s
top leagues.

And though these
top clubs and their players will always enjoy battling for superiority on the
pitch, one thing they’ll always have in common is their wealth.

In today’s market, football clubs pay unfathomable amounts to prize new players from their rivals. With clubs backed by mega-rich owners and shareholders from all four corners of the globe, today’s footballing landscape is hugely separated from its past.

In 1979, Trevor Francis became the first British footballer to sell for £1m (from Birmingham City to Nottingham Forest), but even that seems a pretty measly figure by today’s standards.

So, who is
the most expensive footballer in the world today?

At the time of writing (July 2022), here are the top 23 most expensive footballers in the world (by transfer fee)*.

 

Neymar

€222m (£198m)
Barcelona to PSG, 2017

€86.2m (£74m)
Santos to Barcelona, 2013

As it stands, Neymar is the most expensive footballer in the
world. His staggering €222m transfer fee from Barcelona to PSG in 2017 is
yet to be outdone.

The prolific goalscorer and highly-renowned playmaker, who
also plays for the Brazil men’s national team, can play various positions. Described
as a footballing ‘phenomenon’, Neymar can play as a central striker or second
striker, winger or attacking midfielder.

The 30-year-old has been the subject of two highly-lucrative
transfers, in particular, during his playing career, too, with Barcelona
playing a handsome €86.2m to Brazilian club Santos for him back in 2013.

Currently, he’s one of only three players to have scored at least 100 goals for three different clubs.

 

Kylian Mbappé

€180m (£163m)
Monaco to PSG, 2018

Not only is PSG’s Kylian Mbappé one of the most expensive
footballers in the world, but he’s also reportedly the highest-paid.

The 23-year-old Frenchman signed a new deal at his hometown club in 2022 taking his salary to around £1m per week—yes, per week.

On the pitch itself, Mbappé is widely considered one of the best
in the world, renowned for his exquisite dribbling, frightening speed and
deadly finishing. He’s PSG’s second-highest goalscorer of all time and became
the youngest French player to score at a World Cup in 2018.

France went on to win the World Cup that year, with Mbappé becoming only the second teenager in history (he was 19 at the time) to score in a World Cup final.

 

Philippe Coutinho

€145m (£105m, later rising to £142m)
Liverpool to Barcelona, 2018

When Brazilian playmaker Philippe Coutinho left Liverpool for
Barcelona at the beginning of 2018 for a club-record fee, he became the world’s
second most expensive footballer at the time.

But despite his undeniable talent, Coutinho never really lived up
to the hype in Spain. However, he was loaned out to German giants Bayern Munich
for the 2019/20 season, where he won a treble consisting of the Bundesliga,
DFB-Pokal and the UEFA Champions League.

After several years away, the midfield wizard is now back on English shores and doing what he does best in the Premier League. He signed a permanent deal with Aston Villa in 2022 after a successful six-month loan spell under the management of former Liverpool teammate Steven Gerrard.

 

João Félix

€126m (£104.1m)
Benfica to Atletico Madrid, 2019

Atletico Madrid’s João Félix plays either as a winger or attacking
midfielder and is known for his creativity, finishing and dribbling.

At the age of just eight, the now-Portuguese international trained
in the youth ranks at Porto before switching to rivals Benfica. Félix worked
his way through the reserves and into the first-team at Benfica, making his
professional debut at just 17.

In doing so, Félix caught the eye of several top European clubs, signing for Atletico for a club-record fee in 2019. It was also the second most expensive transfer for a teenager in history.

 

Antoine Griezmann

€120m (£107m)
Atletico Madrid to Barcelona, 2019

French forward Antoine Griezmann is next on the list after his €120m
transfer from Atletico Madrid to Barcelona in 2019 made him the fifth most
expensive transfer of all time.

A highly-versatile attacking player, Griezmann is rightly feared
by opposing sides for both club and country.

He was the top goalscorer and player of the tournament as France
finished runners-up to Portugal at UEFA Euro 2016. Two years later, he was the
second-highest tournament goalscorer at the 2018 World Cup in Russia and was
awarded ‘man of the match’ in the final versus Croatia.

See also  The Masters 2022 – Bernard Gallacher reviews as Scheffler wins crown

Griezmann was also nominated for the Ballon d’Or in 2016 and Best FIFA Men’s Player in 2018.

 

Jack Grealish

£100m
Aston Villa to Manchester City, 2021

Jack Grealish’s £100m transfer from Aston Villa to Manchester City in the summer of 2021 made him the most expensive English footballer of all time. The hefty sum remains the highest fee ever paid for a player by a British club.

Grealish had been with his boyhood club Aston Villa since the age of six but couldn’t resist the lure of the champions after impressing for England at UEFA Euro 2020 (which took place in 2021 due to COVID).

The highly-rated attacking midfielder and winger is known
for his mazy dribbling runs and impressive assists—so much so that he’s been likened
to the legendary Paul Gascoigne several times.

He won the Premier League in his first season at Manchester City.

 

Romelu Lukaku

€115m (£97.5m)
Inter Milan to Chelsea, 2021

£72m
Everton to Manchester United, 2017

€80m (£68m)
Manchester United to Inter Milan, 2019

It’s fair to say Romelu Lukaku, or ‘Big Rom’ as he’s often
affectionately known, has had his fair share of lucrative transfers throughout
his career. In fact, he’s the world’s most expensive footballer if you tally up
his various transfer fees—but we know it doesn’t really work like that.

Despite playing for several clubs during his time in England,
including Everton, Manchester United and West Brom, there’s no denying Chelsea
is ‘his’ club. Chelsea was the club that first brought him to England, and he
rejoined them from Inter Milan in 2021 for a club-record fee just shy of £100m.

Lukaku is Belgium’s all-time leading goalscorer, representing his country at four major tournaments. Known for his bullish strength and aerial ability, he’s always got a goal in him, whether it be with his feet or head.

 

Ousmane Dembele

€105m (£89m)
Borussia Dortmund to Barcelona, 2017

At the time of writing, 25-year-old Ousmane Dembele plays as
a winger for Barcelona and the French national team.

And at the time of his transfer from Borussia Dortmund to
Barcelona in 2017, he became the joint-second most expensive footballer of all
time alongside fellow Frenchman Paul Pogba (of course, this has since been
outdone).

Though his first season in Spain was plagued by injury, he
was part of a Barcelona side that won a cup double; La Liga and the Copa del
Rey.

At age 21, Dembele was part of the triumphant 2018 French World Cup team and featured at the delayed UEFA Euro 2020 three years later.

 

Paul Pogba

€105m (£89m)
Juventus to Manchester United, 2016

Mentioned above, you can also Paul Pogba to the seemingly endless
list of expensive French footballers.

His £89m transfer from Juventus to Manchester United in 2016
made headlines for various reasons. Not least for the price tag but also because
United had let him join Juventus for free in 2012.

Pogba first joined Manchester United’s youth team in 2009,
aged 16, progressing to the first-team by 18. But after making just three
senior appearances for United in the 2011/12 season, he left for Juventus on a
free transfer, where his rise certainly caught the eye.

Pogba’s value had rocketed by 2016. United forked out almost £90m to buy back the player they’d let leave for nothing four years earlier. Like teammate Mbappé, Pogba was also on the scoresheet in the 2018 World Cup final.

 

Gareth Bale

€100.8m (£85.1m)
Tottenham to Real Madrid, 2013

Not only is Gareth Bale widely regarded as one of the greatest
wingers of a generation, but also one of the best Welsh footballers of all
time.

Bale’s £85.1m transfer (equivalent to more than €100m) from
Tottenham to Real Madrid in 2013 was, at the time, a world-record fee.

After joining Real Madrid, Bale was part of the relentless
attacking trio dubbed ‘BBC’ (Bale, Benzema, Cristiano), helping the club win
the Copa del Rey and UEFA Champions League in the 2013/14 season. Bale scored
in both finals.

He returned to Tottenham for a season-long loan in 2020 before confirming his official exit from Real Madrid at the end of the 2021/22 season.

 

Cristiano Ronaldo

€100m (£85m)
Real Madrid to Juventus, 2018

€94m (£80m)
Manchester United to Real Madrid, 2009

Cristiano Ronaldo, or CR7, as he’s also known, is widely considered
one of the greatest footballers of all time, alongside Lionel Messi.

He first made his name in England after joining Manchester United from Sporting CP as a teenager in 2003, enjoying a rapid rise to the top, which later earned him a £80m move to Real Madrid.

At the time of writing, Ronaldo has won a staggering 32
trophies in his career—a tally which includes seven league titles and five UEFA
Champions Leagues at club level, and one UEFA European Championship and UEFA
Nations League with his native Portugal.

See also  Best 5 Single Seater Golf Buggies On The Market 2022

On a personal level, he holds several records, such as most appearances,
goals and assists in the Champions League. He’s also scored more than 800 goals
for both club and country.

Ronaldo rejoined Manchester United ahead of the 2021/22 season.

 

Eden Hazard

€100m (£85m)
Chelsea to Real Madrid, 2019

Eden Hazard first made his name in England after leaving French
side Lille in 2012 to join Chelsea, where he won the UEFA Europa League in his
first season and PFA Young Player of the Year in his second.

The Belgian international established himself as one of the world’s
best during his time in west London, winning a handful of domestic trophies with
Chelsea—such as the Premier League and FA Cup. In 2018, he was also named in
FIFA’s FIFPro World XI.

Hazard joined Spanish giants Real Madrid in the summer of 2019 for
a deal which, reportedly, increased to the value of €150m upon the meeting of
certain contract clauses.

At international level, he’s been captain of Belgium since 2015, skippering them to number one in the FIFA men’s rankings during that time.

 

Harry Maguire

£80m
Leicester City to Manchester United, 2019

Centre-back Harry Maguire’s £80m move from Leicester City to
Manchester United in 2019 was a world-record transfer fee for a defender,
making him another one of the world’s most expensive footballers.

England-regular Maguire first cut his teeth in the Football
League, beginning his career at his hometown club Sheffield United before
joining Hull City and enjoying a loan spell at Wigan Athletic.

He joined Premier League Leicester City in 2017 and played there
until the then Manchester United boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer brought him to Old
Trafford in 2019.

Within six months of arriving in Manchester, Maguire was made United’s club captain.

 

Gonzalo Higuaín

€90m (£77m)
Napoli to Juventus, 2016

Gonzalo Higuaín is a striker currently plying his trade in the US
for MLS side Inter Miami. Nicknamed ‘El Pipita’, Higuaín is known for his keen eye
for goal, solid physique and consistent work rate.

The Argentine started his career with River Plate before securing
a move to Real Madrid in 2007 for a somewhat humble sum of around €12m. He won
three La Liga titles, among other honours, while in Spain, scoring 107 goals in
190 league appearances.

Higuaín switched Spain for Italy in 2013, joining Napoli for three
years before a bumper €90m move to Juventus in 2016. He’s since enjoyed loan
spells at AC Milan and Chelsea.

He also earned 75 caps for Argentina, scoring 31 goals, before retiring from international football in early 2019.

 

Virgil van Dijk

£75m
Southampton to Liverpool, 2018

Dutch centre-back Virgil van Dijk is widely considered one of the
world’s best current defenders. In fact, he’s the only defender ever to have
won UEFA’s Men’s Player of the Year award.

His £75m switch from Southampton to Liverpool in 2018 was, at the time,
a world-record transfer fee for a defender. This was outdone a year later when
Manchester United signed Harry Maguire.

Known for his aerial strength, composure and leadership, Van Dijk
helped Liverpool reach back-to-back UEFA Champions League finals in 2018 and
2019—winning the latter against Tottenham in Madrid. He also helped the
Merseyside club end their 30-year league title drought, with the Reds clinching
the 2019/20 Premier League crown.

Van Dijk has also finished runner-up for the Ballon d’Or and Best FIFA Men’s Player.

 

Jadon Sancho

€85m (£73m)
Borussia Dortmund to Manchester United, 2021

As transfers go, they don’t come much more eagerly-anticipated
than Jadon Sancho’s £73m summer move to Manchester United in 2021.

The highly-rated youngster had previously enjoyed youth loan spells at Watford and United’s local rivals Manchester City, but this was to be his first major Premier League move—from German giants Borussia Dortmund—where he’d been playing since 2017 and become a first-team regular.

Sancho also made the shortlist for the Golden Boy award in 2020.

Known for his lightning pace, trickery and creative flair, the now senior England international was part of the youth side that won the U17 World Cup in 2017.

 

Nicolas Pepe

€79m (£72m)
Lille to Arsenal, 2019

Ivory Coast winger Nicolas Pepe joined Arsenal for a club-record
fee in 2019, eclipsing the north London club’s previous record for
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

Previously at French club Lille, Pepe was named in the Ligue 1
Team of the Year for the 2018/19 season, sparking interest from several clubs
in the UK and abroad.

He left Lille for Arsenal that summer and won the FA Cup in his
debut season.

Pepe was born in France to parents of Ivorian descent—hence his international loyalty. He received his first Ivory Coast call-up in 2016 and has represented them at the Africa Cup of Nations three times at the time of writing.

 

Aurélien Tchouaméni

€80m (£68m)
Monaco to Real Madrid, 2022

Defensive-midfielder Aurélien Tchouaméni’s move from Monaco to
Real Madrid makes the Frenchman another one of the most expensive footballers
in the world.

According to reports, the initial €80m fee could rise to as much
as €100m further down the line.

See also  The Masters 2023: where does Rahm now sit among the career Grand Slam hopefuls?

Tchouaméni can play either as a six or an eight and is known for
his forward-thinking mentality despite often sitting deep to screen the back
line.

Although of Cameroonian descent, Tchouaméni represents his country of birth internationally. He received his first call-up to the France senior squad in 2021 and made his debut in a World Cup qualifier against Bosnia and Herzegovina.

 

Luis Suárez

€82.3m (£65m)
Liverpool to Barcelona, 2014

Luis Suárez’s £65m move to Barcelona in 2014 left Liverpool fans
gutted, and it’s easy to see why.

The Uruguayan international enjoyed three big years in a Liverpool shirt after signing from Ajax in 2011. Deadly in front of goal, Suárez equalled the goalscoring record for a 38-game Premier League season (31), previously set by Alan Shearer in 1995/96 and Cristiano Ronaldo in 2007/08.

He went on to score 147 goals in 191 league appearances for
Barcelona in a six-year spell before joining La Liga rivals Atletico Madrid in
2020.

Suárez has had an impact wherever he’s played. Among his individual honours are two European Golden Shoes, an Eredivisie Golden Boot and a Premier League Golden Boot. He’s scored more than 500 goals for both club and country throughout his career.

 

James Rodríguez

€80m (£68m)
Monaco to Real Madrid, 2014

Colombian international James Rodríguez is an attacking midfielder
currently playing with Al-Rayyan in the Qatar Stars League.

However, much like Aurélien Tchouaméni, it was his transfer from
Monaco to Real Madrid which made him one of the world’s most expensive
footballers back in 2014.

Rodríguez first started turning heads on the European scene while
playing for Porto between 2010 and 2013, before moving to Monaco for a year and
later switching to Real.

He’s known for his technique, playmaking and exceptional vision on the field. He also won the Golden Boot at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

 

Kepa Arrizabalaga

€80m (£68m)
Athletic Bilbao to Chelsea, 2018

Kepa Arrizabalaga (often referred to just as Kepa) is the world’s
most expensive goalkeeper.

The Spaniard’s €80m move from Athletic Bilbao to Chelsea in 2018
set a new transfer record for goalkeepers, outdoing the €72.5m fee Liverpool
had paid for Alisson from Roma just weeks before.

At the time of writing, the €80m fee is yet to be matched for a
goalkeeper.

Since moving to Chelsea, Kepa has enjoyed great success on the European stage, winning the UEFA Europa League, UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Super Cup.

 

Lucas Hernandez

€80m (£68m)
Atletico Madrid to Bayern Munich, 2019

Lucas Hernandez began his career at Atletico Madrid, where
he made more than 100 competitive appearances, reaching the final of the UEFA
Champions League in 2016 and winning the Europa League and Super Cup in 2018.

The defender joined Bayern Munich in a deal worth around €80m in
2019. He won a treble (Bundesliga, DFP-Pokal and UEFA Champions League) in his
first season in Germany.

Hernandez represents his native France at international level, receiving his first senior call-up in 2018. He was part of France’s World Cup-winning squad that year and later featured at UEFA Euro 2020.

 

Álvaro Morata

€78.9m (£67m)
Real Madrid to Chelsea, 2017

Álvaro Morata is a Spanish striker currently playing for Atletico
Madrid, although he began his career at local rivals Real, where he had two
spells as a senior player (2010-14 and 2016-17).

His move to Chelsea in the summer of 2017 was a club-record for
Chelsea at the time, who went on to win the FA Cup and UEFA Europa League with
Morata in the side. He scored 15 goals in all competitions in his debut season
in England.

Morata is a highly-versatile player, renowned for his pace, intensity
and energy. He can play as a lone striker, in a duo system, or even on the
wing.

Morata has also represented Spain as a senior player since 2014.

 

*Football clubs often don’t disclose full player transfer fees, which can lead to final figures being contested. All financial sums displayed in this blog are based on reports by sports media outlets. Euro to GBP conversion rates may vary. GBP only displayed on transfers between two British clubs.

 

Regardless of level, if you play or coach football
regularly, you should consider insurance. After all—it’s a high-intensity sport
in which accidents and injuries are commonplace.

All it takes is one mistimed tackle or one bad injury, and
you could be left out of action and potentially pocket for some time.

At Insure4Sport, our specialist football insurance for players, teams and coaches can be tailored to meet your needs. Our policies can include Public Liability up to £10m, Professional Indemnity cover up to £1m, and protection in the event of accidents and injuries, too.

Click here to find out how our specialist football insurance can stop you from scoring a financial own goal.

 

Related

The most important football training equipment

The ‘FIFA 40’—the best FIFA songs of all time, according to Spotify

How to conduct a risk assessment for a football coaching session