Eli5: Transfer fee in football

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How does transfer fee work in league football? How does this relate to player’s salaries and what does it mean to go on a loan to another club?

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4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Players have a contract with the club which traditionally expires in June after the season ends. The Club registers the player with the Football Association and they are only allowed to play for their registered club. The club negotiates pay with the player (or the player’s agent). If another club want to buy that player, they have to negotiate with the current club to buy the registration and with the player for salary. When both are accepted, the registration is transferred. With loans, the loaning club negotiates a contract with the borrowing club which sometimes has a loan fee. They then agree the wages. The parent club continues to pay all the wages and if agreed, the borrowing club pay some of that money to the loaning club.
Say you have a young player earning £10,000 a week at Chelsea and they go to Gillingham to gain experience. Gillingham may pay £5,0 a week to Chelsea to cover part of the salary.00

Anonymous 0 Comments

Transfer fees are just the price one club pays to buy the contract of a player at another club. There is no set way they are calculated – its a negotiation between the two clubs – but typically the remaining salary, talent and estimated career left are major factors.

Going on loan to another club is just that – you loan a player to another club for a set duration. In these cases, there is no transfer fee associated, but the club that takes the loaned player is typically responsible for their salary for the duration of the loan and the loaning club _might_ ask for a one-time fee to compensate them for the loss of the player..

Anonymous 0 Comments

Regarding transfer fees and salaries, the transfer fee is paid to the club with the player’s rights and not to the player — exception there is that many player contracts include a loyalty bonus where the player gets a percentage of the transfer fee if he meets certain criteria (generally plays for a certain number of years and doesn’t make a formal transfer request). There’s no direct relationship between transfer fee and salary, but an agent would use a large transfer fee as evidence of how valuable a player is and how much he should be paid as a salary.

Anonymous 0 Comments

So every player in professional sports signs a contract with an individual club. This contract among other things says if this person plays whatever sport, they can only play it for this team. (European clubs sometimes cover multiple sports, but let’s keep it simple).

So essentially you say to the club I will exclusively play soccer for you for x years for y dollars. In the simplest terms a transfer fee is what a different club would pay your current club to own your contract. This is separate and distinct from your salary and number of years you’re obligated to play. So for example if you see Messi’s transfer fee was like 100 million, that’s the amount the team buying him paid the other club for the right to pay Messi to play. In general the player doesn’t get any of that money. (Contracts being what they are you can contract for most things absent a CBA or laws but let’s keep this simple).

You see this done in American sports with trades, but it can be done with money in most sports too it’s just not common.

If a players contract expires in general they are free to sign with any other team and that team in general wont pay a transfer fee. You’ll see this listed as a free transfer.

So then you get to loans. The purpose of loans is a team wants to keep a player for the future but doesn’t have space for them now, or a team wants a player but doesn’t want a full commitment to the player. In European leagues there is a thing called promotion/relegation. So the top teams in a lower league get to move up and the bottom teams in the higher league move down.

So let’s say 2nd division team is doing well but needs a striker, an upper division team has a young promising striker, but currently he’s at best a substitute if he even dresses for their team. They like his future but he needs to improve. They’ll make a deal with the second division team to loan him, this way he gets play time, and they keep his rights for the next year(s). This benefits the 2nd division team because they now have a player that might be better than their current strikers. They pay all or part of the player being loaned salary depending on the agreement.

Again there is tons of nuance but that’s the basics