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MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2025
January transfer spend up almost 75% from last year, says Fifa study

Sports

Reuters
09 February, 2022, 01:30 pm
Last modified: 09 February, 2022, 01:31 pm

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January transfer spend up almost 75% from last year, says Fifa study

English clubs topped spending with an outlay of $349.5 million, followed by Italy with $113.6 million and Spain with $111.1 million. England was also the top gainer in terms of transfer receipts, earning $108.6 million.

Reuters
09 February, 2022, 01:30 pm
Last modified: 09 February, 2022, 01:31 pm
January transfer spend up almost 75% from last year, says Fifa study

Transfer spending in men's soccer went up by 74.7% in the January window compared to last year as clubs signed more players in a sign of a recovery following two pandemic-hit years, world governing body Fifa said on Tuesday.

Clubs spent $1.03 billion on players last month, just shy of the $1.16 billion recorded in January 2020.

A total of 3,791 international transfers were completed across men's and women's soccer -- a rise of 28% compared to 2021 among male players, and a new all-time high of 42.8% increase in the women's game.

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"For the first time since the outbreak of the pandemic, transfer fees and the number of transfers experienced significant growth," a study from FIFA said.

English clubs topped spending with an outlay of $349.5 million, followed by Italy with $113.6 million and Spain with $111.1 million. England was also the top gainer in terms of transfer receipts, earning $108.6 million.

Serbia striker Dusan Vlahovic's move from Italian Serie A club Fiorentina to rivals Juventus was reported to be the most expensive in the window, with the deal worth up to 80 million euros ($91.34 million).

Ferran Torres swapping Manchester City for Barcelona and Luis Diaz moving to Liverpool from Porto were second and third on the list, with the reported fees of 55 million euros ($62.79 million) and 45 million euros ($51.38 million), respectively.

Football

fifa / winter transfer window / Club Football

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