Most Expensive Premier League Transfers Ever (2026)

Ben Jardine
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Ben Jardine
Ben Jardine is the managing editor of My Football Facts and has covered football since 2014. He writes across football statistics, history and current affairs, from...
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The Premier League has been the most lucrative division in world football for more than three decades, and its clubs spend like it. Records that once felt untouchable now fall almost every transfer window, and the ceiling keeps rising. The £15 million Newcastle United paid for Alan Shearer in 1996 was a world record at the time. Today it would not get a club anywhere near this list.

The signing of Alexander Isak in 2025 reset the top of the chart once again. Below is a clear ranking of the most expensive Premier League transfers ever, with the fee, the clubs involved, the year and the position, followed by the stories behind the biggest deals. For the full history of how the British transfer record has climbed since 1893, we have a separate chronological breakdown.

A note on the numbers: transfer fees are rarely confirmed in full by the clubs, so figures are reported totals that can include add-ons and may vary slightly by source. Several deals on this list were agreed at an initial £100 million before bonuses. We have ranked by the widely reported total fee.

The 10 most expensive Premier League transfers ever

Top 10 by reported fee (incoming transfers to Premier League clubs)
#PlayerFeeFromToYearPosition
1Alexander Isak£125mNewcastle UnitedLiverpool2025Forward
2Florian Wirtz£116mBayer LeverkusenLiverpool2025Attacking midfielder
3Moisés Caicedo£115mBrighton & Hove AlbionChelsea2023Midfielder
4Enzo Fernández£106.8mBenficaChelsea2023Midfielder
5Declan Rice£105mWest Ham UnitedArsenal2023Midfielder
6Jack Grealish£100mAston VillaManchester City2021Winger
7Romelu Lukaku£97.5mInter MilanChelsea2021Forward
8Paul Pogba£89.3mJuventusManchester United2016Midfielder
9Antony£81.3mAjaxManchester United2022Winger
10Harry Maguire£80mLeicester CityManchester United2019Defender

1. Alexander Isak: £125m, Newcastle United to Liverpool (2025)

The Sweden striker sits at the very top after a long, fractious saga that ended on deadline day of the 2025 summer window. His £125 million move broke the British transfer record and made him the most expensive signing in Liverpool's history, edging past the player directly below him. It is also the largest fee ever paid in a deal between two Premier League clubs. Isak's first season at Anfield was disrupted by a lack of pre-season and injury, so the fee still has plenty to prove.

2. Florian Wirtz: £116m, Bayer Leverkusen to Liverpool (2025)

For a few weeks Wirtz was Liverpool's record buy, arriving from Leverkusen for a reported £116 million that rose from an initial fee of around £100 million. The Germany playmaker had been a standout of Leverkusen's unbeaten Bundesliga title win, and Liverpool moved decisively in the same summer they also landed Isak. Like his new clubmate, Wirtz found the step into the Premier League a demanding one in year one.

3. Moisés Caicedo: £115m, Brighton to Chelsea (2023)

Chelsea won a drawn-out chase for the Ecuador midfielder, paying an initial £100 million that could rise to £115 million with add-ons. At the time it was a record fee between two British clubs and a statement of how much elite defensive midfielders now cost. After a mixed start, Caicedo grew into one of the Premier League's most influential ball-winners.

4. Enzo Fernández: £106.8m, Benfica to Chelsea (2023)

Signed on deadline day in January 2023, the Argentina midfielder arrived fresh from winning the World Cup. His £106.8 million fee was a British record at the time and underlined Chelsea's aggressive recruitment under new ownership. Enzo offers control in deep areas, the kind of profile clubs now pay a premium to secure.

5. Declan Rice: £105m, West Ham to Arsenal (2023)

Rice remains the most expensive British player, joining Arsenal from West Ham in a package worth around £105 million after the Gunners saw off competition for his signature. The England midfielder has gone from strength to strength at the Emirates, shielding the back line while still driving forward, and he stands as a rare case of a nine-figure fee that has looked good value.

6. Jack Grealish: £100m, Aston Villa to Manchester City (2021)

Manchester City triggered Grealish's £100 million release clause in 2021, making him the first British player to be bought for nine figures. He needed time to adapt to Pep Guardiola's system, then settled into a useful role during a period of title and Champions League success, proof that a record fee does not always deliver instant returns.

7. Romelu Lukaku: £97.5m, Inter Milan to Chelsea (2021)

Chelsea brought the Belgium striker back for around £97.5 million, just short of the £100 million mark, hoping for a powerful focal point after his Serie A title win with Inter. Tactical issues and off-field friction meant the second spell did not work out, and Lukaku was moved on within two years.

8. Paul Pogba: £89.3m, Juventus to Manchester United (2016)

A world record fee when it was completed, Pogba's return to Old Trafford came four years after the club had let him leave for nothing. He delivered moments and silverware in his first season, but injuries and inconsistency followed, and the saga ended with another free transfer back to Juventus.

9. Antony: £81.3m, Ajax to Manchester United (2022)

Erik ten Hag pushed hard to reunite with the Brazil winger, and United paid more than £80 million to bring him from Ajax. The fee quickly became a reference point for the club's recruitment problems of that era, with returns on the pitch falling short of the outlay.

10. Harry Maguire: £80m, Leicester City to Manchester United (2019)

Maguire arrived as the most expensive defender in world football, a record that has since been beaten. His Old Trafford career has had clear highs and lows, but his ranking here is another example of how often Manchester United appear among the league's biggest spenders.

Premier League transfers ranked 11 to 20

The next tier shows how broad the spending has been, taking in defenders, a goalkeeper and a run of more recent forwards. Fees are reported figures and may include add-ons.

Ranked 11 to 20 by reported fee
#PlayerFeeFromToYearPosition
11Joško Gvardiol£77mRB LeipzigManchester City2023Defender
12Virgil van Dijk£75mSouthamptonLiverpool2018Defender
13Romelu Lukaku£75mEvertonManchester United2017Forward
14Jadon Sancho£73mBorussia DortmundManchester United2021Winger
15Nicolas Pépé£72mLilleArsenal2019Winger
16Rasmus Højlund£72mAtalantaManchester United2023Forward
17Kepa Arrizabalaga£71.6mAthletic BilbaoChelsea2018Goalkeeper
18Wesley Fofana£70mLeicester CityChelsea2022Defender
19Hugo Ekitike£69mEintracht FrankfurtLiverpool2025Forward
20Benjamin Šeško£66.3mRB LeipzigManchester United2025Forward

Kepa Arrizabalaga's £71.6 million move remains the world record fee for a goalkeeper.

Which clubs have spent the most?

Manchester United appear more often than anyone else across the top 20, a reflection of years of heavy spending with mixed results, from Pogba and Antony to Maguire, Sancho, Højlund and Benjamin Šeško. Chelsea are not far behind, with Caicedo, Enzo Fernández, Lukaku, Fofana and Kepa all featuring. Liverpool have concentrated their outlay on fewer, larger deals, headlined by Isak and Wirtz and supported by Virgil van Dijk and Hugo Ekitike. Manchester City and Arsenal complete the picture with Grealish and Gvardiol, and Rice and Pépé respectively. You can explore club-by-club records and spending across our all-time Premier League section.

Midfielders are the new premium

For years the biggest fees went to strikers and the occasional galáctico winger. The modern market tells a different story. Five of the ten biggest Premier League fees have been spent on central midfielders: Wirtz, Caicedo, Enzo Fernández, Rice and Grealish. Clubs now pay elite money for players who can control games, win the ball back and progress play, not only for those who score the goals. The headline striker fees have not gone away, as Isak proves, but the centre of the pitch has become just as expensive as the front of it.

What about inflation?

Cash lists only tell part of the story. Because the league's revenues have grown so sharply, a fee from the 1990s or 2000s represented a far bigger share of the money in the game than the raw figure suggests. Football finance analysts who adjust historic fees for that growth produce very different rankings, with names such as Alan Shearer, who cost £15 million in 1996, climbing above today's biggest deals. By that measure the most expensive signings in Premier League history would look almost nothing like the cash list above. It is a useful reminder that a record fee is best judged against the era it was paid in, not just the number on the cheque.

Frequently asked questions

Transfer fees move quickly and the figures are often disputed, so these are the questions readers ask most about the Premier League's biggest deals. The short answers below cover the current record holder, the most expensive British player, how add-ons change the numbers and why inflation-adjusted rankings tell a different story.

Who is the most expensive Premier League signing ever?

Alexander Isak. Liverpool signed the Sweden striker from Newcastle United for a reported £125 million in 2025, a British transfer record and the highest fee ever paid by a Premier League club.

What is the most expensive transfer between two Premier League clubs?

Isak's £125 million move from Newcastle to Liverpool. It overtook Moisés Caicedo's £115 million transfer from Brighton to Chelsea in 2023, which had previously held that record.

Who is the most expensive British player?

Declan Rice. Arsenal paid West Ham a package worth around £105 million in 2023, narrowly above the £100 million Manchester City spent on Jack Grealish in 2021.

Which club has made the most big-money signings?

Manchester United appear most often among the Premier League's record fees, with deals for Paul Pogba, Antony, Harry Maguire, Jadon Sancho and others. Chelsea and Liverpool are the next biggest spenders.

Are these the initial fees or the total fees?

They are widely reported totals that can include add-ons, so they vary by source. Initial fees are often lower. Several deals on this list were agreed at an initial £100 million before bonuses.

Why do inflation-adjusted lists look so different?

Because the league's revenues have grown enormously, older fees such as Alan Shearer's £15 million in 1996 represent a far larger share of the money in the game than the raw number suggests, so adjusted rankings reshuffle the order considerably.

Fees correct as of June 2026. For the latest deals, see our Premier League transfers hub.

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Ben Jardine is the managing editor of My Football Facts and has covered football since 2014. He writes across football statistics, history and current affairs, from all-time records and World Cup deep dives to live transfer-window coverage, with a focus on rigorously fact-checked, data-led analysis. Connect with Ben on LinkedIn.
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