Man Utd post sixth straight annual loss despite record revenues

Manchester United players appreciate the fans at the end of the English Premier League football match between Manchester City and Manchester United at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on September 14, 2025. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)

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Manchester United on Wednesday reported an
annual net loss for the sixth consecutive year despite record revenues of
£666.5 million ($910 million).
The Red Devils were without Champions
League football in 2024/25 and stumbled home 15th in the Premier League --
their lowest top-flight finish in 51 years.
Ruben Amorim's men reached the final of the
Europa League but lost to Tottenham in Bilbao.
Revenue marginally increased by 0.7 per
cent to £666.5 million in the year ending June 30, 2025 while the operating
loss fell significantly from £69.3 million to £18.4 million compared with the
previous 12 months.
Overall losses dropped significantly from
£113.2 million to £33 million after co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe oversaw
wide-ranging, and often unpopular, cost-cutting measures, including widespread
job cuts.
Chief executive Omar Berrada said in a
statement on Wednesday United were beginning to feel the benefits of their
cost-saving measures, adding the club were building for the "long
term".
"On the field, we are pleased with the
additions we have made to our men's and women's first-team squads over the
summer, as we build for the long-term," he said.
"Off the field, we are emerging from a
period of structural and leadership change with a refreshed, streamlined
organisation equipped to deliver on our sporting and commercial objectives.
"To have generated record revenues
during such a challenging year for the club demonstrates the resilience which
is a hallmark of Manchester United."
The start of a five-year shirt sponsorship
deal with Snapdragon fulled record commercial revenues of £333.3 million while
the club achieved record matchday revenues of £160.3 million.
United are expecting the next financial
year to bring in revenue of £640 million to £660 million despite being without
European football for the first time since 2014/15.
In January, Deloitte ranked
United fourth in its annual Football Money League, behind Real Madrid,
Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain, showing the robustness of the club's
finances despite years of under-achievement.
The team have started the new season
poorly, taking just four points from their first four matches in the Premier
League, their worst to a league campaign since 1992/93.
Manager Amorim, whose team also crashed out of the League Cup at the hands of fourth-tier Grimsby, is under huge pressure ahead of Saturday's home match against Chelsea at Old Trafford.
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