Barcelona’s salary cap limit is boosted by £694MILLION to £569m by LaLiga

REVEALED: Barcelona’s salary cap limit is boosted by £694MILLION to £569m as LaLiga allows the Spanish giants to spend big on their new summer signings… six months on from forcing the club to slash their wage bill

  • Barcelona were handed a negative salary cap after the January transfer window
  • But now they have been given huge leeway to spend with a cap of £569million
  • It is second only to Real Madrid’s cap, which has gone down to £592million 
  • Girona have the lowest cap in LaLiga, being allowed to spend just £36million  

Barcelona’s ability to bring in a host of big name signings this summer has been brokered by a huge hike in their wages allowance from LaLiga. 

Following the January transfer window, Barca were the only team in the Spanish top-flight to have a negative salary cap at minus €144million (£125m) – essentially urging them to slash their wage bill. 

But the Catalan giants have been given leeway this season to spend an incredible €656m (£569m) – a hike of £694m. 

Barcelona have been given an incredible £484 rise in their salary cap allowance by LaLiga 

Real Madrid remain the club with the biggest wage salary in Spain with £592 being allocated

Real Madrid remain the club with the biggest wage salary in Spain with £592 being allocated 

That money has been used to bring in big names including Raphinha, Robert Lewandowski, Franck Kessie, Marcus Alonso, Hector Bellerin and Jules Kounde.

The club have had to be clever in managing those wages, and had to wait to register French defender Kounde for players to move on and reschedule contract bonuses in other contracts.

LaLiga’s salary cap table was revealed on Friday and only shows Real Madrid above Barcelona, with Caro Ancelotti’s men having a figure of €683 (£592m) – £46m down on last season’s figure. 

The Champions League holders had a modest summer by their standards, with their only major signings coming in Aurelien Tchouameni from Monaco for £72m and the free transfer of Antonio Rudiger, who left Chelsea at the end of last season. 

SALARY CAPS FOR LALIGA CLUBS 

REAL MADRID – £592m 

BARCELONA – £569m

ATLETICO MADRID – £295m 

SEVILLA – £172m

VILLARREAL – £130m

REAL SOCIEDAD – £116m

ATHLETIC BILBAO – £110m

REAL BETIS – £83m

VALENCIA – £65m 

ESPANYOL – £62m 

 GETAFE – £59m

CELTA VIGO – £54m 

OSASUNA – £45m

ALMERIA – £43m 

ROYAL VALLECANO – £42m 

REAL MALLORCA – £42m

VALLADOLID – £39m

CADIZ– £39m

ELCHE – £37m

GIRONA – £37m

 

Atletico Madrid have enjoyed a hike in their salary cap and can now allow for £295m in wages

Atletico Madrid have enjoyed a hike in their salary cap and can now allow for £295m in wages 

Atletico Madrid are now third in the salary cap table behind the El Clasico rivals, having been given their own rise in salary cap to €341m (£295m) and leapfrogging Sevilla – whose allowance has remained almost the same. 

HOW DOES LALIGA’S SALARY CAP WORK? 

LaLiga introduced a salary cap back in 2013 in a bid to place more control on keeping member clubs away from major debts and repayments.

The salary limit for each team – they are individually worked out every season – is calculated by subtracting squad costs (fees, wages, bonuses, pension contributions) from total income generated.

That income is calculated from TV rights, sponsorship, money earned from LaLiga, club membership fees, publicity, and selling players. 

At the other end of the scale, Elche and newly-promoted Girona have the lowest salary cap in LaLiga with an allowance of €43m (£37m) on wages. 

LaLiga first brought in a salary cap in 2013, with the belief that the league needed to protect the long-term financial health of its clubs.

It was believed that too many clubs – examples that have been cited by the league bosses include Deportivo La Coruna and Racing Santander – between the first and second divisions were putting themselves at risk with limited protections across their finances.

The salary cap works on the understanding that each club is given a different cap depending on the revenue and spending that occurred during the previous season.

The model is popular in American sports leagues such as the National Football League (NFL) and the National Basketball Association (NBA) but is less common across Europe’s major leagues.

Major clubs such as Real Madrid and Barcelona have typically been able to spend significantly more than smaller clubs because they generate more money.

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