Over the last decade or so, football on the European stage has become more and more expensive. Gone are the days of true bargain buys unless contracts expire with Real Madrid lying in wait. Instead, even teams in the bottom half of the Premier League are in a position to spend over £50m on one single star.
For better or for worse, the transfer market on the European stage centres around some of the most absurd figures that the game has ever witnessed and that has seen a number of stars reach unbelievable cumulative transfer fees.
To truly contextualise the crazy times that we're in, Sportingpedia ranked the players who have generated the highest cumulative transfer fees in football history.
Players Cumulative fees
Neymar (Santos) €400m
Romelu Lukaku (Napoli) €369.2m
Cristiano Ronaldo (Al-Nassr) €247m
Alexander Isak (Liverpool) €246.1m
Ousmane Dembele (PSG) €233m
Joao Felix (Al-Nassr) €225.7m
Alvaro Morata (Como) €213m
Antoine Griezmann (Atletico Madrid) €206m
Matthijs de Ligt (Man Utd) €197.5m
Matheus Cunha (Man Utd) €192.2m
10 Matheus Cunha (Man Utd): €192.2m
Cunha
After completing a move worth €72m to Manchester United in the summer, Matheus Cunha takes his place on this list. The Brazilian has finally returned to one of Europe's top clubs following a rejuvenated spell at Wolverhampton Wanderers. Now, his task will be to avoid a repeat of his time at Atletico Madrid.
Despite transfer fees reaching as high as €192.2m, courtesy of Atletico, RB Leipzig and Hertha Berlin, it's taken until the last two years for the forward to truly find his best form - allowing United to take full advantage.
9 Matthijs de Ligt (Man Utd): €197.5m
De Ligt
Another current Man United player on this list, Matthijs de Ligt is a tough one to evaluate. Whilst he has never gone down as a transfer flop, the Dutchman has also never really realised the potential that he showed during his time at Ajax.
Moves to Juventus and then Bayern Munich were worth over £60m each prove how highly-rated he's been throughout his career, but he is yet to turn that reputation into a transformative role at Old Trafford.
Since arriving for another £60m, De Ligt has been part of a struggling side which finished as low as 15th in the 2024/25 Premier League campaign. For a player who has generated €197.5m in transfer fees, the Manchester club may have been expecting more.
8 Antoine Griezmann (Atletico Madrid): €206m
antoine-griezmann-2023-2024-stats
If the world pretended that his disastrous spell at Barcelona didn't happen, then Antoine Griezmann would have one of the most respected careers in Spanish football. Unfortunately for him, however, pretending that a €120m move didn't take place is a lot easier said than done.
The Frenchman spent two years at the Catalan club before heading back on loan to Atletico Madrid in 2021 and sealing a permanent move back to the club in 2023 for as little as €20m.
Since then, the forward has thrived and should have done more than enough by now to get himself back on Diego Simeone's Christmas card list.
7 Alvaro Morata (Como): €213m
alvaro-morata-como
For large parts of Alvaro Morata's career, it was a guessing game between Juventus, Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid as to where he was plying his trade at any given moment. The Spaniard, despite never becoming one of the best players in the world, consistently found himself in a tug-of-war between European giants.
When considering his form on the pitch over the years, his place on this list comes as a surprise. Alas, when considering that he's played for both Madrid clubs, Chelsea and Juventus, it should come as no shock at all.
Those at Stamford Bridge will still be scratching their heads at the forward's £60m price-tag in 2017.
6 Joao Felix (Al-Nassr): €225.7m
Portugal's Joao Felix celebrates scoring their first goal with Joao Cancelo and Rafael Leao
There seems to be a worrying trend on this list of Chelsea and Atletico Madrid regrets. This time, it's Joao Felix that they've been forced to remember. The Portuguese striker has wracked up a grand total of €225.7m in transfer fees across his career - €126m of which came courtesy of Atletico Madrid in 2019.
Chelsea then made a similar mistake, signing Felix for around €51m back in February before moving him on to Al-Nassr a few months later in a deal worth €50m.
Despite generating close to €200m in transfer fees at Chelsea and Atletico alone, the forward failed to score more than 34 goals at either club.
5 Ousmane Dembele (PSG): €233m
Paris St Germain's Ousmane Dembele celebrates after winning the men's Ballon d'Or award
Had Ousmane Dembele not just enjoyed an excellent season and won the Ballon d'Or as a result, we may be having a different conversation. But, in 2025, the Frenchman finally proved his worth - much to the regret of Barcelona.
The Spanish giants paid Borussia Dortmund as much as €150m in 2017, before injuries and poor form controlled the narrative of his time at the club.
What was Barcelona's trash soon became PSG's treasure and their golden boy has since starred on Europe's top stage. Having swooped in and secured his signature for just €50m, the French giants even managed to get themselves an absolute bargain in 2023.
4 Alexander Isak (Liverpool): €246.1m
alexander-isak-liverpool
Liverpool smashed their transfer record to sign Alexander Isak in a deal worth as much as €145m in the summer transfer window and are now hoping to see the Swede make their long pursuit worthwhile.
He quickly became one of the best strikers in the world at Newcastle United and that form was always likely to attract some of the biggest sides in the world. Fresh from their Premier League crown, the Reds came calling and simply did not take no for an answer before finally landing their man.
3 Cristiano Ronaldo (Al-Nassr): €247m
Al Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo misses a penalty
Once the world's most expensive footballer, Cristiano Ronaldo has continuously been involved in big-money deals throughout his legendary career and rightly so.
For €94m, Real Madrid landed the world's best player in 2009 and then Juventus landed an aged, yet still thriving version of the winger for €117m in 2018. Both deals should be considered bargains for one of the best players in football history.
Nowadays, the Portugal international is still going for his country and still scoring time and time again at club level for Saudi Pro League side Al-Nassr in search of the 1000-goal mark.
2 Romelu Lukaku (Napoli): €369.2m
amir-rrahmani-napoli
Amir Rrahmani and Romelu Lukaku celebrate winning the Serie A title with Napoli.
Time to look away again, Chelsea fans, for €110m of Romelu Lukaku's total €369.2m in combined transfer fees came from those at Stamford Bridge in 2021.
It was supposed to be the ultimate homecoming from a complete goalscorer who initially rose through the ranks in West London before finding success elsewhere. The curse of the No.9 only continued, though, and Lukaku entered a long list of struggling forwards at Chelsea - scoring just 15 goals.
Italian football have seen an entirely different side to the Belgian. They've seen the striker that Chelsea thought they'd signed, with Inter Milan and Napoli both benefitting over the years.
1 Neymar (Santos): €400m
neymar-santos
Arguably the biggest talent of his generation, Neymar's place at the top of this list should come as no surprise. The Brazilian remains the most expensive footballer of all time thanks to PSG, who paid as much as €222m to secure his signature in 2017.
Arguments could go around in a circle as to whether he ever proved worth that money, but ask PSG if they'd do it again and the answer would be a resounding yes. You simply do not choose to miss out on a player of Neymar's calibre.
Although injuries have stood in the way of his career in recent years, it will be difficult to forget the part he played alongside Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez at Barcelona and the lasting impact he made on football's transfer market in 2017.