Liverpool top agent fees list with €51m spend in last year

Chelsea (€31m), Manchester City (€28m) and Manchester United (€24m) follow on list

Liverpool’s Fabio Henrique speaks with goalkeeper Alisson Becker  during the   Champions League round of 16 match against Bayern Munich at Anfield in February   2019. Photograph: Getty Images
Liverpool’s Fabio Henrique speaks with goalkeeper Alisson Becker during the Champions League round of 16 match against Bayern Munich at Anfield in February 2019. Photograph: Getty Images

Liverpool spent £43.8 million (€51 million) on agents' fees during the past year – about £17 million (€19.8 million) more than any other Premier League club – according to new figures from the Football Association.

Between them Premier League clubs paid a record £260.6 million (€303.7 million) of intermediary fees between February 2018 and the end of January 2019, smashing last year’s total of £211 million (€245.9 million), which itself was a record.

Chelsea paid the second-highest amount to agents, spending £26.8 million (€31.2 million), ahead of Manchester City on £24.1 million (€28 million) and Manchester United on £20.8 million (€24.2 million).

The fact Tottenham spent more than £11 million (€12.8 million) on agents’ fees, despite not making any major signings, might also raise some eyebrows. However, the FA figures published every year do not amount to the total agents’ fees agreed on the deals done in these transfer windows. As most of the fees are paid in instalments, the figures add up to the actual money paid by the clubs during the year.

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Intermediary fees

That also explains why Liverpool's intermediary fees have nearly doubled in the past year – even though the £173 million (€201.6 million) they spent on Alisson, Naby Keïta, Fabinho and Xherdan Shaqiri in the 2018-19 season was only £18 million (€20.9 million) higher than the money paid for Virgil van Dijk, Mohamed Salah, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Andrew Robertson in the 2017-18 season.

The FA does not publish the individual fees paid to each agent on a specific deal. However, the latest figures are sure to increase the pressure for something to be done about it. The issue will be back on the agenda during Friday’s Premier League shareholders meeting in London, with clubs and the governing body both wanting to introduce rules to stop agents being paid by both the club and the player in a single transfer.

Fifa is also looking at changing its rules so that only a player can pay the agent, while limiting the percentage of the contract the player then has to share with their representative. It is likely to be capped at about 5 per cent.

World record

Meanwhile, Tottenham have broken the world record for the biggest profit made by a football club, during the 2017-18 financial year. Spurs’ accounts, lodged at Companies House, showed the club made £113 million (€131.6 million) after tax last season – beating Liverpool’s £106 million (€123.5 million).

The figures also show that the club has a bank loan of more than half a billion pounds to cover the cost of its new stadium and that its wage bill rose 16 per cent to £147.6 million (€172 million). That figure, however, is less than half that of Manchester United’s £296 million (€344.9 million) and way behind Arsenal’s £223 million (€259.8 million). Everton are close to overtaking Spurs as the sixth-highest payers in the Premier League after their wage bill rose 40 per cent to £145.5 million (€169.5 million).

– Guardian