Audio By Carbonatix
Manchester United are to cut 250 jobs as part of a determination to slash costs and scrap some "non-essential" activities.
United director Sir Dave Brailsford has led a wide-ranging review of club operations since Ineos’ co-ownership of the club was confirmed in December.
Sir Jim Ratcliffe had already told staff of his desire for them to return to working from club premises.
However, club sources now say financially significant transformation is required to halt the steepling rise in year-on-year costs.
The review has concluded, structure-wise, the size and shape of the club does not reflect the current football performance and they have more staff than they need.
Sources say cost savings have been identified around "non-essential" activities, which are to cease.
It is yet to be clarified what these activities are, but the aim is to reduce headcount and employee costs. United have 1,150 full-time members of staff.
Interim chief executive Jean-Claude Blanc delivered news of the cuts at an all-staff meeting with around 800 people present.
The move is bound to be greeted negatively, with many pointing out poor recruitment around the first team has wasted far more money than will be saved by cutting the rank and file workforce.

Two years ago former chief executive Richard Arnold was filmed telling a group of fans that United had "burned through" £1bn on players, to achieve very little.
United last won the Premier League in 2012-13. In the intervening period they have spent £1.5bn on new players, very few of whom have proved to be good value.
The club have had a £35m bid for Everton defender Jarrad Branthwaite turned down this summer and are keen to bring in two central defenders and an additional forward player.
In addition, United have just committed £50m to the development of its Carrington training ground, which in the short term has led to the women’s team vacating the new facility constructed for them so it can be used by Erik ten Hag’s squad.
Ratcliffe said in a recent interview with Bloomberg that it had been "an interesting six months" since he bought the club and it was "not going to be a short journey" to put United on the right path.
"It hasn’t kept up with the modern world," he added. "Some of the practices are not at the level they should be for the biggest football club in the world."
In the spring it was confirmed that a task force, which includes Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and former United captain Gary Neville, had been appointed to look into the financial viability of building a new stadium close to the current site at Old Trafford.
United officials privately say the decision to cut staff has not been taken lightly and all areas of the club will be affected, with the exception of the charitable arm, the Manchester United Foundation.
They say alternatives were considered but the impact would not have been long-lasting.
A formal process to propose redundancies will now commence.
Latest Stories
-
IGP Yohuno has promoted 12,802 police officers in the first six weeks of 2026
2 seconds -
Goldbod jewellery warns public against fake ‘Gold Investment’ schemes
17 minutes -
It’s unfortunate and disturbing – Akwatia MP reacts to ‘galamsey tax’ exposé
18 minutes -
U20 WWCQ: Black Princesses arrive in Nelspruit ahead of South Africa clash
18 minutes -
2,800 vulnerable people receive Ramadan food support in Greater Kumasi
26 minutes -
Bid launched to extend Zimbabwe president’s term in office
28 minutes -
Align domestic reforms with Pan-African goals – Armah-Kofi Buah urges African nations
28 minutes -
Ato is not ‘forcing’ for farmers—Zaato
29 minutes -
Alleged vote-buying won’t affect Baba Jamal’s chances in Ayawaso East by-election – NDC
33 minutes -
Ghana showcases mining strength and reforms at Mining Indaba 2026
34 minutes -
71% of Ghanaians worried about rising food prices, despite 68% approval for Mahama – IEA survey
37 minutes -
Antoine Semenyo enjoying ‘fairytale’ start to Manchester City career
1 hour -
Semenyo is an ‘incredible signing’ – Pep Guardiola on Ghanaian forward
1 hour -
ASID 2026: Leaders urge stronger laws to protect children online
1 hour -
Mohammed Fuseini scores in Royale Union Saint-Gilloise win over Charleroi
2 hours
