Tottenham’s 2024-25 accounts revealed a £121m pre-tax loss — their worst ever. Combined with a bitter ownership feud between Daniel Levy and ENIC, the financial crisis behind Spurs’ relegation battle is more severe than most fans realise.
Tottenham’s 2024-25 accounts revealed a £121m pre-tax loss — their worst ever. Combined with a bitter ownership feud between Daniel Levy and ENIC, the financial crisis behind Spurs’ relegation battle is more severe than most fans realise.
Beneath Tottenham’s on-pitch relegation battle lies a financial crisis that is arguably more serious than the table position suggests. The Tottenham financial crisis of 2026 is not simply the result of a bad season. It is the outcome of years of structural decisions — a stadium project that transformed the club’s infrastructure but saddled it with enormous debt, a player trading model that stopped generating profits at the critical moment, and an ownership structure that has now collapsed into a bitter legal feud. Understanding these financial realities is essential for anyone trying to make sense of how Spurs arrived at this point.
Tottenham Hotspur’s 2024-25 annual accounts revealed a pre-tax loss of £121 million — the worst in the club’s history by a considerable margin. The prior year’s loss had been £26 million. The jump to £121 million in a single financial year represents an acceleration of losses that has alarmed the club’s creditors, its UEFA financial overseers, and outside observers who track Premier League club finances closely.
What makes this figure particularly troubling is that it occurred despite rising revenues. Tottenham’s commercial income, matchday receipts, and broadcast distributions all increased in the period. The losses were driven instead by soaring operating costs and by the cost of servicing the £1.5 billion in debt taken on to finance the new stadium. Furthermore, player trading profits — which clubs like Tottenham have traditionally relied on to balance their books — collapsed compared to earlier periods.
The result is a club with strong infrastructure and rising revenues that is nonetheless burning cash at an unsustainable rate. Keith Wyness, the former Everton chief executive, described Spurs as facing a “cash flow crisis” rather than a PSR breach. The distinction matters. PSR charges result in points deductions — painful but survivable. A genuine liquidity crisis means the club cannot fund its own operations without owner injections or emergency player sales. UEFA’s separate financial monitoring produced a result described internally as painting “a worrying picture” of the club’s medium-term position.
The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is one of the most impressive football venues ever built in England. Opened in 2019 at a cost of approximately £1 billion — later rising to around £1.5 billion when full financing costs are included — it seats over 62,000 spectators and generates significant non-football revenue through NFL games, concerts, and other events. On paper, it represents a transformational long-term asset.
In practice, however, servicing that debt has created a permanent drag on the club’s cash position. Even at relatively low interest rates, the annual cost of debt servicing runs into tens of millions of pounds. Importantly, this cost is fixed regardless of the club’s sporting performance. Whether Tottenham finish fifth or are relegated to the Championship, the debt payments do not pause.
That asymmetry between fixed financial obligations and variable sporting revenues is at the heart of the Tottenham financial crisis. As BBC Sport financial analysts have noted in comparable situations, stadium debt of this scale requires consistent Premier League income to remain manageable. Championship football removes that income floor entirely.
One of the more counterintuitive aspects of the Tottenham financial crisis is that the club has not been charged with breaching the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules. Unlike Everton and Nottingham Forest, who faced points deductions in recent seasons, Spurs have navigated the PSR framework without formal sanction.
There are structural reasons for this. The Premier League’s PSR calculations allow clubs to exclude certain infrastructure-related costs from the three-year rolling losses figure. Tottenham’s stadium costs therefore provide a degree of accounting protection that other heavily-spending clubs do not enjoy. Additionally, their wage-to-turnover ratio — standing at approximately 46% in recent reported years — has been significantly lower than many rivals.
However, PSR compliance and financial health are not the same thing. A club can remain within the rules and still face a severe liquidity problem. That is precisely Spurs’ position. They have not breached PSR limits, but they lack the cash to invest meaningfully in the transfer market without either selling players or receiving capital injections from ownership. Consequently, Tottenham cannot compete financially with the clubs above them — and that sporting gap has been painfully visible this season.
If the financial figures are alarming, the ownership situation is explosive. Daniel Levy — who served as Tottenham chairman for over 25 years — was removed from his role in the summer of 2025. His exit should have marked a clean transition. Instead, it triggered one of the most bitter ownership disputes English football has seen in years.
Levy has reportedly claimed an additional shareholding in ENIC — the majority ownership vehicle controlled by Joe Lewis — beyond the 29.88% his family officially hold. The claim relates to a trust structure through which Levy alleges he is entitled to approximately 10% more equity than is currently recognised. If validated, this would potentially trigger mandatory buyout provisions that would force ENIC to purchase his stake at a price neither party appears willing to accept without litigation.
According to reporting by Bloomberg and Sports Business Journal, Levy has considered formal legal action against ENIC and Joe Lewis. The dispute has deterred at least one serious acquisition attempt — a £1 billion proposal from a Hong Kong-based consortium that reportedly lost interest when the ownership structure became too contested to provide clear title to a buyer. Consequently, Tottenham’s ownership is effectively gridlocked at the worst possible moment.
Three managers have been sacked in the span of a single season — a clear symptom of a boardroom unable to make stable, long-term decisions. Each managerial change costs money in severance, disrupts the squad’s tactical preparation, and sends a destabilising signal to the playing staff. For a team already under relegation pressure, this instability is compounding the on-pitch problems rather than addressing them.
Adding a further layer of commercial complexity is an ongoing sponsorship dispute with INEOS — the chemicals and sports empire controlled by Jim Ratcliffe, who also holds a significant stake in Manchester United. INEOS is reportedly pursuing Tottenham for approximately £11 million over alleged breaches of exclusivity provisions in their sponsorship agreement. The breach relates to commercial discussions Spurs entered with Audi during the period surrounding Harry Kane’s 2023 departure to Bayern Munich.
In isolation, an £11 million dispute is not enormous for a club of Tottenham’s scale. In context, however, it adds to an accumulating picture of commercial relationships under strain, management distraction, and legal costs that divert resources from the core task of keeping the club in the Premier League.
The financial consequences of Tottenham actually being relegated are severe enough that experts who have modelled the scenario describe it as potentially triggering a spiral from which the club may not emerge quickly. The assumption that a club of Spurs’ size would bounce back quickly from the Championship is not supported by recent precedent.
Revenue would fall dramatically. Premier League broadcast income of over £100 million annually would be replaced by Championship distributions of around £10 to £15 million. Even accounting for parachute payments worth approximately £45 million in year one and declining thereafter, the shortfall against the stadium debt service costs is enormous.
Furthermore, Tottenham’s player contracts are widely reported to contain relegation clauses that would trigger either wage reductions or the right for players to leave at reduced transfer fees. The club’s best players would be entitled to seek departures. Therefore, the squad that would need to win promotion from the Championship immediately would be a shadow of the one that got relegated.
Without Premier League football and with contested ownership, the club’s ability to attract quality players in the summer transfer window would collapse entirely. Therefore, Tottenham’s path back to the Premier League would depend on survival in the Championship — itself not guaranteed — followed by years of rebuilding under constraints that make competing with better-resourced clubs essentially impossible.
The parallel with Manchester United’s well-documented financial challenges is instructive. As we outlined in our analysis of Man United’s £1.3 billion debt crisis, large Premier League clubs can absorb enormous financial stress as long as the sporting results hold. The moment they do not, structural problems become existential rather than manageable.
Survival in the Premier League would buy Tottenham time — but it would not resolve the underlying Tottenham financial crisis. The £121 million loss figure would need to be addressed through player sales in the summer, a significant reduction in the wage bill, or fresh owner capital injections. None of those options are straightforward given the ownership dispute.
A clean resolution to the Levy vs Lewis feud — whether through a negotiated buyout, a court-ordered settlement, or the successful conclusion of an acquisition by a new ownership group — would be the single most important development for the club’s medium-term future. Without it, decision-making remains paralysed and investor interest remains limited.
Seven games remain on the pitch. Every result matters. But even the most optimistic survival scenario leaves a club that needs to rebuild its finances, its management structure, and its sporting identity simultaneously during a summer with very limited resources. For the full on-pitch picture of where Spurs stand right now, read our companion piece on Tottenham’s relegation battle.