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Premier League clubs made payments of £460m to agents over the past year - a 13% increase on the previous 12 months.
It covers payments made by clubs to agents registered with the Football Association involving a player, coach or club - including transfer and contracts - between February 2025 and February 2026.
Chelsea, who paid out £65.1m, were the highest spenders for the third consecutive year.
On Wednesday, the west London club announced the biggest pre-tax loss in Premier League history. The £262m deficit for 2024-25 eclipses the £197.5m loss Manchester City recorded in 2011.
The Blues partly attribute this year's figure to recording the highest number of player sales in Premier League history.
Chelsea offloaded nearly £300m worth of players to comply with UEFA sanctions.
After record payments of £75m to agents in 2023-24, the club have spent a total of £200m over the past three assessment years.
Aston Villa were second on the list, paying £38.4m, which was an increase of £13.4m - the highest rise of any club.
This is despite the Villans spending a relatively modest £69m on incoming transfers. Unai Emery's side had a high number of costs associated with renegotiating player contracts and new professional registrations.
In third were Manchester City with £37.4m, though year-on-year spending fell dramatically - down by £14.8m from £52.1m.
Arsenal, Liverpool and Wolves also saw significant increases in agents fees.
The Gunners' payments went up £9.4m to £32.1m. Liverpool's rose £13m to £33.9m. Wolves saw an increase of £12.5m to £26m.
Sunderland's unexpected promotion to the Premier League through the play-offs brought a rise in payments from just £2.2m to £10.6m.
Alongside Manchester City, seven other clubs reduced payments to agents.
Brentford, Fulham, Manchester United, Nottingham Forest and West Ham saw modest drops.
Newcastle's payments were reduced by £4.1m to £20.3m, while Leeds - despite being promoted - cut outgoings on agents' fees by £4.9m to £14m.
Spending in the Women's Super League rose 75%, by £1.6m to £3.8m.
Chelsea were again the biggest spenders, with their £1.1m accounting for over a quarter of the total.
Payments went up by 10% in the Championship to £69.7m, with Ipswich Town the highest spenders on £11.7m.
Agents' fees in League One soared by 85%, influenced by the presence of Luton Town (£3.3m), Cardiff City (£1.7m) and Huddersfield Town (£1.5m), who accounted for close to half of the £14m total.
In League Two, the amount fell slightly by 5% to £2.6m.
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