
Spanish Giant, Real Madrid retained their place at the summit of the world’s 20 richest football clubs for the 11th year in a row, having generated £439m, according to Deloitte Football Money League.
Although, half of the top 30 highest-earning football clubs in the world play in the Premier League, but Spanish sides Real Madrid and Barcelona lead the way.
Real’s arch-rivals Barcelona rose two places to second on the list, pushing Manchester United down to third. Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich completed the top five.
Real Madrid actually saw a £4.3m fall in broadcast revenue but significant gains in commercial revenue and matchday income made up for the loss.

1. Real Madrid (€577m),
2. Barcelona (€560.8m),
3. Man Utd (€519.5m),
4. Paris St Germain (€480.8m),
5. Bayern Munich (€474m),
6. Man City (€463.5m,
7. Arsenal (€435.5m),
8. Chelsea (€420m),
9. Liverpool (€391.8m)
10. Juventus (€323.9m).
11. Borussia Dortmund (€280.6m),
12. Tottenham (€257.5m),
13. Schalke (219.7m),
14. AC Milan (€199.1m),
15. Atletico Madrid (€187.1m),
16. Roma (€180.4m),
17. Newcastle (€169.3m),
18. Everton (€165.1m),
19. Inter Milan (€164.8m),
20. West Ham (€160.9m).
21. Galatasaray (€159.1m),
22. Southampton (€149.5m),
23. Aston Villa (€148.8m),
24. Leicester (€137.2m),
25. Sunderland (€132.9m),
26. Swansea (€132.8m)
27. Stoke (€130.9m),
28. Crystal Palace (€130.8m),
29. West Brom (€126.6m),
30. Napoli (€125.5m).

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