Chelsea FC has reported a pre-tax loss of £262 million for the 2024-25 season, the largest in Premier League history. This figure surpasses Manchester City's £197.5 million deficit from 2011, despite the club achieving significant successes including the UEFA Conference League and Club World Cup. Chelsea maintains compliance with Profit and Sustainability Rules.
Chelsea disclosed the £262 million pre-tax loss on April 1, alongside revenue of £490.9 million, described by the club as their second-highest ever. The Blues finished fourth in the Premier League while securing the UEFA Conference League and Club World Cup during the campaign. The club emphasized that this headline figure differs from calculations used for Profit and Sustainability Rules compliance, which allow £105 million losses over three years, and insisted they remain within limits. Losses incorporated one-off costs such as a £10.75 million Premier League fine for agent payments from Roman Abramovich's era, plus write-offs for Raheem Sterling's release and Mykhailo Mudryk amid his ongoing drugs test investigation. Since BlueCo's 2022 takeover, Chelsea has invested over £1 billion in young players on extended contracts. UEFA imposed a £26.7 million fine earlier this season for squad-cost ratio breaches and continues monitoring. The reported loss is lower than UEFA's prior £355 million estimate, attributed to excluding intra-group sales with co-owned Strasbourg. Chelsea anticipates record revenues ahead, including £85 million from the Club World Cup and £80 million in Champions League TV money.