Chelsea generated almost £12m in revenue by selling the Kingsmeadow stadium to their women's team
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View from the corner flag at Kingsmeadowopen image in gallery
View from the corner flag at Kingsmeadow (Getty)
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Chelsea generated almost £12m in revenue by selling the Kingsmeadow stadium to their women's team during the year ending June 2025.
Chelsea sold the women's team itself to a subsidiary company in 2024 for almost £200m, significantly contributing to a profit of £128.4m in that year's accounts.
The Blues announced Premier League record pre-tax losses of £262.4m on 1 April for the year ending 30 June 2025, and have now published the full accounts related to that period.
A payment of £22.6m from Chelsea FC Women (CFCW) is listed under related party transactions within the Chelsea FC Holdings accounts. Sources close to the club say almost £12m of that relates to the sale of Kingsmeadow by CFC Holdings to CFCW, following independent valuation.
Sources indicated the value of the Kingsmeadow sale had been assessed and approved as being at fair market value by the Premier League under its associated party transaction (APT) rules, which govern deals struck between entities linked to a club's ownership.
The remainder of the money paid by CFCW - plus £11.3m showing in the books going the other way, from CFC Holdings to CFCW - is understood to be part of an inter-company agreement reached when the women's team was sold to Blueco Midco - a subsidiary company controlled by Chelsea's owners - in 2024.
No further details of the inter-company agreement were revealed on Monday, but the £22.6m paid by CFCW is more than the total revenue earned by the women's team according to the figure announced by the club on 1 April - £21.3m.
Chelsea were found to be compliant with the Premier League's profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) for the season ending 2024-25 despite the record-breaking loss revealed on 1 April, and also for the current campaign.
Chelsea owner Todd Boelhy at Chelsea’s Conference League final last seasonopen image in gallery
Chelsea owner Todd Boelhy at Chelsea’s Conference League final last season (PA Archive)
PSR state losses must not exceed £105m over a three-year period, but losses for spending on items such as infrastructure, youth and women's football can be added back.
Chelsea originally bought Kingsmeadow from the owners of AFC Wimbledon in June 2016 for a reported £2m.
CFCW's full accounts are expected to be published on the Companies House website later on Monday.
The club declined to comment.
PA