LIVE
...

Follow us on

News

How much Arsenal have made in UEFA Champions League prize money after knocking out Real Madrid

Add as preferred source on Google

Arsenal pulled off a historic result in the UEFA Champions League on Wednesday.

Mikel Arteta defeated Carlo Ancelotti and Real Madrid convincingly across both legs, progressing into the last four with a 5-1 scoreline on aggregate, which is quite the achievement against a side who have won the UEFA Champions League a record 15 times.

Not only do Arsenal now have a chance to win their first ever UEFA Champions League title, but a large chunk of prize money is also heading to the Emirates Stadium after progressing beyond the quarter-final.

Arsenal bank over £12m after defeating Real Madrid

Just for reaching the semi-final, Arsenal have secured a sum of at least £12.64m in prize money, as UEFA revealed in an official document, the total given to semi-finalists.

That is a useful chunk of cash for the Gunners – over double the £6m fee spent to sign Gabriel Martinelli from Ituano in July 2019 – and there is more in the bank from earlier rounds.

Real Madrid C.F. v Arsenal FC - UEFA Champions League 2024/25 Quarter Final Second Leg
Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images

Arsenal finished third in the league phase with six wins and a draw from eight games, so Arteta also secured £11.2m before the knockout stage even began.

The remarkable 9-3 aggregate win over PSV Eindhoven in the Round of 16 then earned the Gunners an additional £9.27m, before reaching the quarter-final banked another £10.53m for the north Londoners.

Furthermore, UEFA pay out €18.62m (£15.95m) before a ball is even kicked just for qualifying for the competition.

Therefore – just in prize money alone – Arsenal have received a total of £59.6m from UEFA this season, with more to come if the Gunners can beat PSG in the last four.

Aston Villa banked £45.19m after PSG knocked the Villans out in the quarter-final on Tuesday.

UEFA money could pay for Nico Williams

Arsenal have already held talks over Nico Williams as Andrea Berta – the new Director of Football for the Gunners – focuses on signing the Spain international.

The talented winger is believed to have a release clause written into his Athletic Bilbao contract worth £49m – so Arsenal could actually trigger this and have more than £10m left over from the UEFA prize money.

Whatever Arsenal decide to do with the cash, it just goes to show how financially rewarding it is to be a formidable side in European football.