

In the modern game, fans seem to spend just as much time fretting over the financial health of their favourite team as they do about how theyre performing on the pitch.
But its amortised over five years, you may hear your average Chelsea-clad boffin say as they usher in their umpteenth multi-million-pound signing of the summer through the door.
But what does amortisation actually mean? Heres a quick breakdown for you
What does amortisation mean in football?
Amortisation is an accounting method used by football clubs to ease the burden placed on their balance sheets by ultra-expensive transfers.
Simply put, rather than a �30m player (Player X) going down as a �30m cost in the first year he signs, a club can opt to spread that cost over the length of their new mans contract.
Say Player X is handed a three-year contract, rather than taking a �30m hit to their accounts in the first year, it will go down as a recurring �10m cost for the next three years.
Conversely, clubs can count the full sale price of an academy player leaving on their books since they weren't signed over a number of years.
In Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) terms, therefore, if a club sells an academy graduate for �30m and buys Player X for �30m the next day, on those same terms, the accounts will show a profit of �20m to use on further purchases in that year, rather than a balance of zero.
In most cases, amortisation is unrelated to when actual money changes hands, as it is merely an accounting method to track the financial health of a club for purposes like PSR.
Premier League clubs voted to bring in rules at the end of 2023 which imposed a five-year limit on amortising transfer fees, following a string of Chelsea signings who were tied down to long-term contracts for this reason.
Despite this, you can give a player as long a contract as you like. Go ahead, Chelsea
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