
FIFA World Cup Revenue: When a spectator sits in the stadium and watches a match, his eyes are on the ball. It is on the players. Is on the scoreboard. He sees players running, hears thousands of voices, hears the noise at the goal. But there is another world hidden behind that picture, which is not generally visible. That is the world of money, business, investment, broadcasting rights, advertising, brands, and global consumer culture.
Today football is not just a game. This is industry. And not even minor industries. It is one of the largest entertainment industries in the world. An industry whose annual activity is larger than the entire economy of many countries. Whose reach is to every continent. And whose impact extends not just to the field but to politics, society and global business.
When football became an industry from a hobby
When the rules of modern football were created in England at the end of the 19th century, no one imagined that the game would ever become a global phenomenon worth trillions of rupees.
In that era players used to play part-time. Worked in many factories. Many worked in railways. Many were teachers or labourers. Clubs were tied to the local community, and the main source of income was ticket sales. Then the picture started changing in the middle of the 20th century. The radio came on. Then came TV. Then came color broadcasting. Then satellite broadcasting connected the entire world. From here football is no longer a local game. It became a global product.
In 1885, the Football Association legalized professionalism, i.e. paying players. At that time the weekly salary was only a few shillings. A maximum wage limit of £20 a week was in force in England until 1961. The limit was lifted following a protest by footballer Johnny Haynes, and he became the first player in history to earn £100 a week. From here the foundation of the professional era of sports was laid.
Broadcast rights: football’s real treasure
Today the biggest crux of football’s economy is not tickets, but broadcasting rights. There was a time when most of the income of the clubs came from the stadium. Today the situation has completely changed. The big leagues sell their broadcast rights for billions of dollars.
The value of domestic and international broadcast rights of the Premier League has now reached several billion dollars. This league is seen in almost every country of the world, in India, Africa and the Middle East. The rights to the UEFA Champions League are also equally valuable. The number of viewers watching a final exceeds the entire population of many countries.
The World Cup is a different matter. Billions of people watch the FIFA World Cup. FIFA’s biggest income is from broadcasting rights. The formation of the English Premier League in 1992 and a £304 million TV deal between Murdoch’s Sky Sports started the revolution in modern sports broadcasting. Today the global TV rights value of the Premier League has crossed 10 billion pounds, i.e. about 12.5 billion dollars. FIFA earned a total of $7.5 billion from the Qatar World Cup, of which more than 85% came from media rights and marketing alone.
Clubs are no longer teams, they are brands
For much of the 20th century, clubs were local identities. In the 21st century they became global brands. Supporters of Real Madrid, Manchester United, FC Barcelona, Liverpool and Bayern Munich are no longer limited to their cities.
A boy from Delhi can be a fan of Real Madrid. Any student from Lucknow can be crazy about Liverpool. A family in Nigeria can be as sentimental as one in Manchester. This globalization is the root of football’s economic power. Clubs no longer just sell matches. They sell identities. Sell emotions. Sell a lifestyle. According to the Deloitte Football Money League report, the world’s top 20 clubs earn 8 to 10 billion euros every year. Clubs like Real Madrid and Manchester United have more than 600 to 800 million digital followers, far larger than the customer base of any major company.
Jersey: not a cloth, but a business worth billions
A club’s jersey is not just sports attire. This is a product. Is a brand. Is a cultural symbol. When a child wears a Messi or Ronaldo jersey, he is not buying clothes. He is buying an identity.
Big clubs sell millions of jerseys every year. Companies like Adidas, Nike, Puma make big deals with clubs and players. A sponsor logo printed on the chest becomes a means of global advertising. Real Madrid’s 10-year deal with Adidas is worth around 1.1 billion euros, or 120 million euros annually, the most expensive kit deal in sporting history. Front-jersey sponsors such as Emirates or Spotify contribute 60 to 70 million euros each year.
Players: From Humans to Brands
The most interesting part of the economic world of football is that the players themselves have become brands. There was a time when players were just players. Today, the social media reach of names like Messi, Ronaldo, Neymar and Mbappé is more than the population of many countries.
One of his posts reaches millions. Companies spend huge amounts of money to contract with them. Shoes are sold, clothes are sold, video games are sold in his name. According to Forbes, today top footballers earn more than 100 to 200 million dollars annually. More than half of Ronaldo and Messi’s total earnings come from off the field, from brand deals, lifetime sponsorships and their own fashion or hotel brands. Ronaldo is the first person in the world to have more than 600 million followers on Instagram, whose commercial post is worth $3 to $4 million.
Transfer market: buying and selling talent
The most popular economic activity in football is player transfers. When a club buys a player, sometimes hundreds of crores of rupees are spent. This was unthinkable a few decades ago. Today this is a common thing.
Neymar’s transfer is the most expensive deal in history. His release clause when moving from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain was 222 million euros, approximately $250 million. The Bosman Act of 1995 was also a major turning point for this market. This gave players the freedom to become free agents and demand the salary they wanted.
World Cup: An event bigger than sports
The World Cup is not just a sports competition. This is an economic phenomenon. When a country hosts the World Cup, it builds stadiums, builds roads, improves airports, builds hotels, promotes tourism.
Host countries receive both direct and indirect benefits, although there is always debate as to whether every investment proves beneficial or not. But there is no doubt that the World Cup is the biggest sporting event in the world. Qatar spent more than $220 billion on stadiums, a new city, metro and infrastructure for the 2022 World Cup, the most expensive World Cup in history. In contrast, the first 48-team World Cup to be held in the United States, Canada and Mexico in 2026 is expected to generate record direct revenues of nearly $11 billion for FIFA and North America.
Social media made football personal
TV had made football global. Social media made it personal. Now supporters don’t just watch matches. They see the everyday lives of the players. Are directly connected to the clubs. Buy a jersey. Take digital subscription. This is the reason why today digital audience is also considered an economic resource. Supporters are no longer just spectators, they have also become consumers.
Big clubs now run their own digital channels, such as Real Madrid TV and LFCTV. Its impact is so strong that in just 24 hours after Messi left Barcelona or Ronaldo joined Al-Nasr, the value of those clubs’ fan tokens jumped by hundreds of millions of dollars.
Deep relationship between football and politics
The economic power of football has also given it political importance. Countries consider it a means to improve their global image. Some countries invest in clubs. Want to host some big tournaments. Football is no longer just the subject of the Sports Ministry. It has also become a part of foreign policy and cultural diplomacy.
This phenomenon is called ‘sportswashing’ and the influence of sovereign wealth funds. Qatar, which owns PSG. The United Arab Emirates, which owns Manchester City. Saudi Arabia, which owns Newcastle United. These Gulf countries have invested billions of dollars in European football and made it a major platform for geopolitics and soft power diplomacy.
What’s next, the future of football
The economy of football will get bigger in the coming years. Artificial intelligence, data analysis, virtual reality and streaming platforms are changing the game. Women’s football is growing rapidly. New markets are opening up, in America, in India, in China, in the Middle East.
Data companies like Opta and StatsBomb are now multi-billion dollar businesses themselves, where every pass, every recovery is measured by AI. Major League Soccer’s $2.5 billion streaming deal with Apple TV in the US suggests that future soccer will not be in the hands of cable TV, but in the hands of the apps of big tech companies.
From sports to industry, a complete journey
Football’s biggest success is not just its popularity. His biggest success is that he completed the journey from being a local sport to becoming a global culture. A century ago it was played in factories and school grounds. Today it is a part of the lives of billions of people. This is a market of emotions. This is an entertainment industry. It is a symbol of identity. And it is also a big part of the global economy.
That is why it is not enough to just call football the most popular sport in the world. It is one of the largest cultural and economic empires in the world today.