List of most expensive association football transfers


The following is a list of most expensive association football transfers, which details the highest transfer fees ever paid for players, as well as transfers which set new world transfer records. The first confirmed record transfer was of Willie Groves from West Bromwich Albion to Aston Villa for £100 in 1893, made just eight years after the introduction of professionalism by the Football Association in 1885.
The current transfer record was set by the transfer of Neymar from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain for €222 million in August 2017. While the current record for women was set by the transfer of Olivia Smith from Liverpool to Arsenal for €1.157 million in July 2025.

Highest transfer records in association football

All selling clubs involved in transfers on this list are under UEFA's jurisdiction. Most players transfer to clubs from the Big Five Leagues, with half of them being Premier League clubs. Saudi Arabian clubs are the only purchasing clubs not under UEFA's jurisdiction. Overall, Manchester United has made the list nine times for player purchases, the most among all clubs.
Romelu Lukaku appears on this list three times for moves to Manchester United, Inter Milan, and Chelsea. Neymar and Cristiano Ronaldo appear on the list twice. All of the players on the list are of European, South American or African origin. There are currently no players on the list from the remaining regions; North America, Asia and Oceania. Ten French players have made their name on the list, the most among all countries.
Most transfer fees listed are not officially disclosed by the trading clubs and are reported by reliable mainstream media. Different media outlets may report varying transfer fees. The transfer fees are ranked in Euro (€) and based on the exchange rate at the time of the transfer.
RankPlayerFromToPositionFee
Fee
Year
1 Barcelona Paris Saint-GermainForward€222£2002017
2 Monaco Paris Saint-GermainForward€180£165.72017
3 Alexander Isak Newcastle United LiverpoolForward€144.5£1252025
4 Benfica Atlético MadridForward€126£1132019
5 Benfica ChelseaMidfielder€121£106.82023
6 Atlético Madrid BarcelonaForward€120£1072019
7 Liverpool BarcelonaMidfielder€118.4£1052018
8 Aston Villa Manchester CityMidfielder€117.7£1002021
9 Bayer Leverkusen LiverpoolMidfielder€117.5£1002025
10 West Ham United ArsenalMidfielder€116.5£1002023
11 Brighton & Hove Albion ChelseaMidfielder€116.3£1002023
12 Inter Milan ChelseaForward€115£97.52021
13 Borussia Dortmund BarcelonaForward€105£96.82017
13 Juventus Manchester UnitedMidfielder€105£89.32016
15 Borussia Dortmund Real MadridMidfielder€103£88.52023
16 Chelsea Real MadridForward€100£892019
16 Real Madrid JuventusForward€100£88.32018
16 Tottenham Hotspur Bayern MunichForward€100£86.42023
16 Tottenham Hotspur Real MadridForward€100£85.32013
20 Ajax Manchester UnitedForward€95£81.32022
21 Manchester United Real MadridForward€94£802009
22 RB Leipzig Manchester CityDefender€90£772023
22 Paris Saint-Germain Al-HilalForward€90£77.62023
22 Napoli JuventusForward€90£75.32016
25 Leicester City Manchester UnitedDefender€86.6£802019
26 Borussia Dortmund Manchester UnitedMidfielder€85£732021
27 Everton Manchester UnitedForward€84.8£752017
28 Southampton LiverpoolDefender€84.4£752018
29 Liverpool BarcelonaForward€82.3£652014
30 Leicester City ChelseaDefender€80.9£702022
31 Manchester United Inter MilanForward€80£742019
31 Lille ArsenalMidfielder€80£722019
31 Athletic Bilbao ChelseaGoalkeeper€80£71.62018
31 Eintracht Frankfurt LiverpoolForward€80£692025
31 Monaco Real MadridMidfielder€80£68.32022
31 Atlético Madrid Bayern MunichDefender€80£682019
31 Monaco Real MadridMidfielder€80£632014
38 Juventus Real MadridMidfielder€77.5£46.22001
39 Aston Villa Al-NassrForward€77£64.52025
40 RB Leipzig Manchester UnitedForward€76.5£66.32025
41 VfL Wolfsburg Manchester CityMidfielder€75.7£552015
42 Real Madrid Manchester UnitedForward€75.6£59.72014
43 Chelsea ArsenalMidfielder€75.3£652023
44 Ajax JuventusDefender€75£67.82019
44 Ajax BarcelonaMidfielder€75£652019
44 Brentford Manchester UnitedForward€75£652025
44 VfB Stuttgart Newcastle UnitedForward€75£64.92025
44 Napoli GalatasarayForward€75£64.82025
44 Manchester City Atlético MadridForward€75£64.42024
44 Eintracht Frankfurt Paris Saint-GermainForward€75£64.22023
44 Benfica LiverpoolForward€75£642022
44 Atalanta Manchester UnitedForward€75£642023

World football transfer record

The first player to ever be transferred for a fee of over £100 was Scottish striker Willie Groves when he together with Jack Reynolds made the switch from West Bromwich Albion to Aston Villa in 1893, eight years after the legalisation of professionalism in the sport. It took just another twelve years for the figure to become £1,000, when Sunderland striker Alf Common moved to Middlesbrough. It was not until 1928 that the first five-figure transfer took place. David Jack of Bolton Wanderers was the subject of interest from Arsenal, and in order to negotiate the fee down, Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman got the Bolton representatives drunk. Subsequently, David Jack was transferred for a world record fee when Arsenal paid £10,890 to Bolton for his services, after Bolton had asked for £13,000, which was double the previous record made when Sunderland signed Burnley's Bob Kelly a fee of for £6,500.
The first player from outside Great Britain to break the record was Bernabé Ferreyra, a player known as La Fiera for his powerful shot. His 1932 transfer from Tigre to River Plate cost £23k, and the record would last for 17 years until it was broken by Manchester United's sale of Johnny Morris to Derby County for £24k in March 1949. The record was broken seven further times between 1949 and 1961, when Luis Suárez Miramontes was sold by Barcelona to Inter Milan for £152k, becoming the first ever player sold for more than £100k. In 1968, Pietro Anastasi became the first £500k player when Juventus purchased him from Varese, which was followed seven years later with Giuseppe Savoldi becoming the first million pound player when he transferred from Bologna to Napoli.
After Alf Common and David Jack, the third player to twice be transferred for world record fees is Diego Maradona. His transfers from Boca Juniors to Barcelona for £3m, and then to Napoli for £5m, both broke the record in 1982 and 1984 respectively. In the space of 61 days in 1992, three transfers broke the record, all by Italian clubs: Jean-Pierre Papin transferred from Marseille to A.C. Milan, becoming the first ever £10m player. Almost immediately, rivals Juventus topped that with the signing of Gianluca Vialli for a fee of £12m from Sampdoria. Milan then completed the signing of Gianluigi Lentini for a fee of £13m which stood as the record for three years.
The 1996 transfer of Alan Shearer from Blackburn Rovers to Newcastle United, for a fee of £15m, kickstarted a year-by-year succession of record breaking transfers: Ronaldo moved the following year to Inter Milan from Barcelona for a fee of £17m, which was followed in 1998 by the shock transfer of his fellow countryman Denílson from São Paulo to Real Betis for a fee of approximately £21m. In 1999 and 2000, Italian clubs returned to their record-breaking ways, with Christian Vieri transferring from Lazio to Inter Milan for £28m, while Hernán Crespo's transfer from Parma to Lazio ensured he became the first player to cost more than £30m. The transfer prompted the BBC to ask "has the world gone mad"? It took two weeks for the record to be broken when Luís Figo made a controversial £37m move from Barcelona to rivals Real Madrid. A year later, Real increased the record again with a signing of Zinedine Zidane for £48m.
Zidane's record stood for 8 years, the longest since the 1940s. Real Madrid continued with the Galácticos policy by buying Kaká from Milan for €67m, which was the world record in pound sterling. However, both world record in euro and in pound sterling were broken by Real themselves when signing Cristiano Ronaldo for £80m from Manchester United in the same transfer window, Four years later Real Madrid broke the record again after completed the signing of Gareth Bale from Tottenham Hotspur in 2013. Although Real initially insisted that the transfer cost €91.59m, slightly less than the Ronaldo fee, the deal was widely reported to be around €100m. Documents leaked in 2016 by Football Leaks revealed that instalments brought the final Bale fee up to a total of €100,759,418. In 2016, Manchester United eventually took the record away from Real Madrid, signing French midfielder Paul Pogba for €105m, four years after having released him to Juventus for training compensation.
A year after the Pogba transfer, however, there was a major jump in the record fee. Paris Saint-Germain matched the €222m buyout fee of Barcelona's Neymar, converted to a reported £198m by different sources, or £200m more than double the previous record. This was the first time that the record fee was paid by a French club.
Overall, Barcelona has broken the record for the highest transfer fee received four times, while Real Madrid has broken the record for the highest transfer fee paid for a player five times.

Historical progression

The transfer fees fluctuate due to exchange rate variations and are based on the exchange rate at the time of the transfer.
YearPlayerFromToFee
1893 Willie Groves West Bromwich Albion Aston Villa
1896 Fred Wheldon Small Heath Aston Villa
1903 Ben Green Barnsley Small Heath
1904 Alf Common Sheffield United Sunderland
1904 Andy McCombie Sunderland Newcastle United
1905 Alf Common Sunderland Middlesbrough
1913 Daniel Shea West Ham United Blackburn Rovers
1913 Tommy Barber Bolton Wanderers Aston Villa
1914 Percy Dawson Heart of Midlothian Blackburn Rovers
1920 David Jack Plymouth Argyle Bolton Wanderers
1921 Tom Hamilton Kilmarnock Preston North End
1922 Syd Puddefoot West Ham United Falkirk
1922 Warney Cresswell South Shields Sunderland
1925 Bob Kelly Burnley Sunderland
1928 David Jack Bolton Wanderers Arsenal
1932 Bernabé Ferreyra Tigre River Plate
1949 Johnny Morris Manchester United Derby County
1949 Eddie Quigley Sheffield Wednesday Preston North End
1950 Trevor Ford Aston Villa Sunderland
1951 Jackie Sewell Notts County Sheffield Wednesday
1952 Hans Jeppson Atalanta Napoli
1954 Juan Schiaffino Peñarol Milan
1957 Omar Sivori River Plate Juventus
1961 Luis Suárez Barcelona Inter Milan
1963 Angelo Sormani Mantova Roma
1967 Harald Nielsen Bologna Inter Milan
1968 Pietro Anastasi Varese Juventus
1973 Johan Cruyff Ajax Barcelona
1975 Giuseppe Savoldi Bologna Napoli
1976 Paolo Rossi Juventus Vicenza
1982 Diego Maradona Boca Juniors Barcelona
1984 Diego Maradona Barcelona Napoli
1987 Ruud Gullit PSV Eindhoven Milan
1990 Roberto Baggio Fiorentina Juventus
1992 Jean-Pierre Papin Marseille Milan
1992 Gianluca Vialli Sampdoria Juventus
1992 Gianluigi Lentini Torino Milan
1996 Ronaldo PSV Eindhoven Barcelona
1996 Alan Shearer Blackburn Rovers Newcastle United
1997 Ronaldo Barcelona Inter Milan
1998 Denílson São Paulo Real Betis
1999 Christian Vieri Lazio Inter Milan
2000 Hernán Crespo Parma Lazio
2000 Luís Figo Barcelona Real Madrid
2001 Zinedine Zidane Juventus Real Madrid
2009 Kaká Milan Real Madrid
2009 Cristiano Ronaldo Manchester United Real Madrid
2013 Gareth Bale Tottenham Hotspur Real Madrid
2016 Paul Pogba Juventus Manchester United
2017 Neymar Barcelona Paris Saint-Germain

Managers

While players are often purchased for high fees, the fee to release a manager from their contract is a lot less. Usually described as a "compensation fee", the amount paid to the manager's current club is based around several factors including the total salary for the current length of his contract, as well as potential bonuses and sponsorship deals, and additional fees if the club also need to pay compensation to hire a new manager.
''The transfer fees fluctuate due to exchange rate variations and are based on the exchange rate at the time of the transfer.''

Women

''This list only includes transfers where a fee amount is reported publicly. The transfer fees are ranked in Pound (£) and based on the exchange rate at the time of the transfer. Fees are in thousands.''