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Liverpool managed to get to the quarter-finals of this year’s Champions League season, an improvement from last year’s round of 16 finish. Image Credits: Imago ImagesLiverpool’s 2025/26 Champions League run may have ended in disappointment on the pitch, but it has delivered a major boost off it – with the club banking a big European payday.Under UEFA’s revamped distribution model, prize money is split into three main pillars: a guaranteed participation fee for all 36 clubs in the league phase, performance bonuses for results and progression, and a new “value pillar” linked to TV market and historical UEFA ranking.Every side receives around €18.6m just for reaching the league phase, while wins are worth €2.1m and draws €700k, with further lump sums for each knockout round reached.
On top of that, clubs like Liverpool benefit from a sizeable share of the value pot thanks to their global appeal and recent European record.Across the campaign, Liverpool is estimated to have earned around £95m in prize money from the 2025/26 Champions League alone according to the Athletic’s Chris Weatherspoon, excluding matchday and commercial income.That figure folds together their base participation fee, league‑phase results, progression bonuses and their slice of the value pillar, making this season Liverpool’s third‑highest European haul ever – behind only the £102m taken in 2021/22 (when they reached the final) and the £98m from their 2018/19 triumph in Madrid.It also represents a healthy jump on last season. In 2024/25, under the first year of the new format, estimates suggested Liverpool’s Champions League earnings sat in the region of £82m.For FSG and Arne Slot, that kind of guaranteed revenue is crucial.
It underpins squad investment, contract renewals and infrastructure spending, and it helps Liverpool keep pace financially with the likes of Manchester City, Bayern Munich and Real Madrid in a market where Champions League money is increasingly a dividing line between Europe’s elite and the rest.Even without lifting the trophy, Liverpool’s 2025/26 run has delivered a financial result worthy of a deep European campaign – and it piles further pressure on the club to maintain Champions League qualification as a non‑negotiable target for the end of this season.Liverpool earned an estimated £95million in prize money from this season’s UEFA Champions League, up £13m on a year ago. #LFC‘s third-highest takings from Europe, only behind £102m in 2021-22 (finalists) and £98m in 2018-19 (winners). Doesn’t include matchday/commercial benefits— Chris (@CWeatherspoon_) April 14, 2026 UEFA Champions League
