A projected £770m in revenue. A new Premier League record. And, crucially, a financial position that renders any meaningful PSR pressure virtually non-existent. Arsenal have not just grown into a footballing superpower under Mikel Arteta – they are now operating in a financial stratosphere that changes everything about how this club approaches a transfer window.
Even if they fall short against Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League final on May 30, £760m in revenue is already guaranteed – comfortably surpassing Manchester City’s previous Premier League record of £715m set in 2023-24. That is not just a number to impress accountants. That is structural freedom.
PSR – the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules, which cap the losses a club can absorb over a rolling three-year period at £105m – only bites when revenue fails to keep pace with spending. At £770m, Arsenal’s revenue base makes that a very distant concern indeed.
What Do Arsenal’s Record Revenue Figures Actually Mean?
Breaking down the £770m projection reveals just how many income streams are firing simultaneously. UEFA TV and prize money alone accounts for £124m for reaching the Champions League final, with a further £4m available for winning it. Commercial sponsors Emirates and adidas are estimated to have bonus clauses worth up to £25m combined – trophies and deep European runs trigger those payments. Then add approximately £25m more from the Premier League itself, including £3m for finishing top and a broader uplift every club receives from the new overseas TV rights deal that came on stream for 2025-26.
Kieron O’Connor, the football finance expert behind the respected Swiss Ramble blog, put it plainly: “It will be a new record for the Premier League in terms of revenue. Arsenal should go up from £691 million last season to about £770 million, which will be massive.” Last season’s £691m was already a record at the time. This season’s figures push Arsenal into third among the world’s richest clubs – behind only Real Madrid and Barcelona.
O’Connor was quick to add context, noting that costs have risen sharply too – approximately £250m spent on new players, a surging wage bill, and performance bonuses for winning the title and reaching the final. “Last year they made an £80m profit on player trading but that will be almost negligible this season so we are likely to see a fairly sizeable loss,” he said. A loss, yes – but one well within the thresholds that PSR and FFP frameworks are designed to police.
Why Arsenal’s Financial Position Makes Them ‘Immune’ to Forced Sales
This is where the revenue story translates directly into sporting consequence. When clubs are squeezed by PSR – as Chelsea have found themselves navigating repeatedly in recent seasons – the pressure to sell valuable assets becomes real and urgent. Star players become accounting tools. That is not a position Arsenal are anywhere near.
Bukayo Saka and William Saliba – the two names that would top any rival’s wishlist and any hypothetical ‘forced sale’ conversation – are under no pressure to be moved. The revenue base eliminates that scenario entirely. PSG have already been sniffing around Arsenal’s attacking talent this summer, but financial necessity will play no part in any decision Arsenal make about their squad. That is a position of genuine strength.
O’Connor confirmed that the extra income gives Arsenal “reasonable space to comply with the Premier League’s and UEFA’s financial rules” – which, given the scale of spending this season, is a significant reassurance for the club’s longer-term planning.
How Arsenal’s PSR Freedom Shapes Arteta’s Summer Plans
For Arteta, this financial clarity means he can approach the summer window from a position most managers in world football would envy. There is no need to sell before buying, no asset that must be sacrificed to unlock a target. The recruitment conversation starts with ‘who do we want?’ rather than ‘what can we afford after the sales?’
That is a fundamentally different posture – and one that Arteta has been building towards since the early years of his rebuild at the Emirates. The wage bill and amortisation costs are rising, but they are rising on the back of a revenue base that is rising faster. That relationship is the whole game when it comes to Premier League Finances and sustainable squad-building.
Should Arsenal qualify for the expanded FIFA Club World Cup – which winning the Champions League would confirm automatically – Chelsea’s £90m earnings from the inaugural edition last summer offer a useful preview of what that additional revenue stream could mean further down the line.
Arsenal vs Chelsea: How the PSR Landscape Has Shifted
The contrast with Chelsea could scarcely be more stark. Chelsea posted a staggering pre-tax loss of £350m in 2025 – an English football record – while Arsenal edged the previous season to near break-even on £691m of revenue. Two clubs, two entirely different PSR realities.
Revenue growth is an industry-wide trend, and several clubs are benefiting from the overseas TV rights uplift. But Arsenal’s trajectory – from a £107m COVID-era loss to record revenues in the space of four years – is exceptional, and it gives Arteta’s squad an infrastructure that most rivals are still trying to construct.
The summer window opens with Arsenal holding all the financial cards. No forced sales, no PSR knife-edge, no panic – just the freedom to build. Whether Arteta uses that platform to land the elite additions that turn a Champions League finalist into a serial winner is the only question that matters now.






























