Milan lodged a protest with Deloitte, who changed their calculations to make Milan the 19th highest-earning football club in the world rather than 30th.

Every year, Deloitte release a report into the Football Money League, calculating the highest revenue generated by clubs in the sport.

After the publication yesterday, Milan wrote directly to Deloitte to complain about an ‘inaccuracy’ and calling for an improvement to their 30th position.

All those details were checked and Milan moved up to 19th, ahead of Roma, Atalanta, Napoli and Lazio.

Their revenue was changed from €148.5m to €216.3m at the request of the Rossoneri.

Juventus remain 10th in the world with revenue of circa €397.9m per year.

Inter follow in 14th place on €291.5m, then Napoli 20th on €176.3m.

The top five are Barcelona (€715.1m), Real Madrid (€691.8m), Bayern Munich (€634.1m), Manchester United (€580.4m) and Liverpool (€558.6m).

The list outlines the biggest revenue for these clubs, not necessarily how much they are worth or the costs required.

3 thought on “Milan moved up Deloitte Football Money League after complaint”
  1. @Simple Ibrahim aka Tammy Abraham stop bringing your hate. Milan for their budget should not even be in first place. Juventus have a higher wage bill and so too Inter. Respectively they should be in 1st and 2nd place.

  2. Inter & Juve made some bad investment lately. Inter probably needs to sell more players in the summer to balance the books again. Juve on the other hand is on the stock market & because of that can make capital injections as they see fit. Tmes will change & Juve will rule italy again soon

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