Chelsea owner Todd Boehly
Chelsea owner Todd Boehly (Image credit: Getty Images)
Chelsea have again appeared to push the boundaries of standard football accounting, with the release of their most recently available annual accounts.
Whilst technically compliant with regulations, the club is operating in a state of structural fiscal dependency on its BlueCo parent company ownership, and one-off asset sales.
A core pillar of Chelsea's strategy has been selling assets to other entities under the BlueCo umbrella to book immediate profits. In 2023/24 and 2024/25, the club booked massive profits, approximately £76m for hotels and £200m for the women's team, by selling them to BlueCo subsidiaries.
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Chelsea's financial gymnastics explained
Liam Rosenior during the Premier League match between Chelsea and Everton
Head coach Liam Rosenior during the Premier League match between Chelsea and Everton
Whilst very much within the rules, the strategy has been viewed by rivals as the Blues exploiting loopholes not available to everybody else, in order to spend more freely.
Such profits exist on paper to offset operational losses, of which Chelsea's are significant, but do not generate new cash for the BlueCo group or Chelsea - they simply move value from one pocket to another.
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Chelsea made a pre-tax loss of £262 million during the relevant accounting period which represents a significant deficit.
Under the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR), clubs are permitted to lose up to £105m over a rolling three-year period.
However, the league allows for specific 'add-backs' - expenditure that is considered beneficial to the long-term health of the game or the community.
These costs are deducted from the club’s bottom-line loss, meaning a club like Chelsea can technically lose £262m but will still be compliant if £150m was spent on these exempt categories.
Categories which are exempt include academy investment, women's football, community and charitable projects as well as infrastructure and capital expenditure, such as stadium or training ground improvements.
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A general view inside the stadium prior to the UEFA Champions League group E match between Chelsea FC and AC Milan at Stamford Bridge on October 05, 2022 in London, England.
Stamford Bridge (Image credit: Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)
The ownership's overall pre-tax loss is £700.8m, however, bringing 22HoldCo's accumulated losses to in excess of £1.5 billion as at June 30, 2025.
UEFA’s Financial Sustainability Regulations (FSR) and the Premier League’s new squad cost controls (SCR) are moving toward a system where spending on wages, transfers, and agent fees must not exceed 70% of revenue, or 85% for Premier League clubs not in Europe.
For the 2024/25 period, Chelsea’s wage bill reached approximately £390m, reportedly the sixth highest in Europe, with amortisation costs soaring to £212m. Combined, these costs exceed Chelsea’s reported turnover of £491m.
A close-up view of Chelsea's kit featuring the Club World Cup badge
A close-up view of Chelsea's kit featuring the Club World Cup badge
Therefore, unless Chelsea dramatically increase their commercial revenue or consistently reach the latter stages of the UEFA Champions League, they will struggle to meet the 70% SCR ratio without significant annual player sales.
The club are locked into a high-wage, high-amortisation cycle whereby players who are signed for large sums but do not perform, end up becoming a significant drain on resources.
The bottom line is if the team fails to secure Champions League football consistently, Chelsea's squad cost ratio will breach regulatory limits, leading to potential points deductions or transfer bans, unless the club regularly engage in the sale of key players for sizeable fees.
In FourFourTwo's opinion, this is hardly what Chelsea fans will want to hear. Not only is their club running a significant financial deficit, they are at risk of becoming a selling club this summer and in perpetuity.
The introduction of SCR will force the club to cut spending or increase revenue. They are no longer able to pull on the one-time levers of selling the women's team or hotels on the Stamford Bridge site, both of which are now reflected in the consecutive years' accounts.