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Uncertain future: This is how much TV money there will be in the new Bundesliga season

Champions Bayer Leverkusen receive the second most television money after FC Bayern

The ongoing dispute between DFL and DAZN is keeping the Bundesliga busy before the start of the season. The trouble has no financial consequences for the new season – but for the following seasons.

Despite missing out on the championship, FC Bayern Munich remains number one in the distribution of TV money. The third-place team from the previous season can plan for more than 100 million euros in the new season. How much money the German Football League (DFL) can distribute from 2025/26 is completely unclear. The record champions share this problem with all other clubs in the 1st and 2nd Bundesliga. The ongoing dispute between the DFL and the internet sports broadcaster DAZN has long-term effects.

Even before the first Premier League kicks off this Friday in Mönchengladbach, the professional clubs know relatively precisely how much money they will receive in the coming months from the proceeds of national and international TV marketing. This season, the DFL will distribute around 1.212 billion euros to the 36 professional clubs from national revenue alone. In addition, there will be around 214 million euros from foreign marketing.

The second is only eleventh

Bayern receives the largest share of the payouts. Borussia Dortmund and champions Bayer Leverkusen follow roughly on a par with each other, each with around 90 million euros. Second-placed VfB Stuttgart, on the other hand, has to make do with around 56 million euros and eleventh place in the TV money ranking, as calculated by the portal “fernsehgelder.de”. This is considered reputable and accurate, as they say in the league.

TV rights

Judgment in dispute between DFL and DAZN expected in September

The dispute between the internet broadcaster DAZN and the German Football League over the awarding of TV rights is being legally resolved. At the same time, the parties to the dispute are signing a contract. …

The key to the distribution is quite complicated, but not secret. The distribution of the TV money is based primarily on a base amount of around 26 million euros for each first division team and 7.4 million euros for each second division team. This equal distribution share is 50 percent. This means that the Bundesliga promoted teams FC St. Pauli (33.6 million) and Holstein Kiel (31.5 million) also receive decent income.

The performance share is 43 percent

What the newcomers, like VfB Stuttgart, lack to earn more TV money are better placings in previous years, which account for 43 percent of the performance share. In contrast, the two pillars of young talent (4 percent) and interest (3 percent) have a small share in the distribution key.

The clubs have already received data from the DFL for short-term planning. How much money the league will earn in the coming seasons and how it will be distributed is, however, completely unclear. The rights auction that was canceled four months ago as a result of the legal dispute between the DFL and DAZN over the awarding of the largest TV package for the 2025/26 to 2028/29 seasons has made further planning for the clubs significantly more difficult.

TV contract is “incredibly far-reaching”

In the run-up to the tender, DFL managing director Steffen Merkel said of the importance of the rights auction, saying it was “so important because the results of this tender are of course so incredibly far-reaching”. The revenues “provide the economic framework for almost the next decade”.

The TV money for the coming seasons plays a key role, not only but especially when it comes to signing new players and concluding multi-year contracts. After all, the income from TV marketing accounts for “on average 30 percent of the clubs’ turnover, in individual cases almost 50 percent,” explained Merkel.

Clubs and the league – as well as all TV providers – are currently waiting for the ruling of the German Institution of Arbitration (DIS), which is negotiating the DFL/DAZN dispute. According to information from the German Press Agency, this is expected at the end of September. The reasons for the ruling will then only follow in December.

Continuation of the auction open

It is therefore unclear when the interrupted auction of TV rights will continue. Ideally, it will start again immediately after the verdict. However, if DAZN waits for the reasons to decide on further legal steps, it could start much later. The internet sports broadcaster and the DFL do not want to comment on the issue at the moment. Managing Director Merkel is trying to demonstrate composure and recently said: “The DFL is already thinking about the next and the next corner. We are in coordination with the Federal Cartel Office so that we do not have any problems with licensing.” On the subject of TV money and the continuation of the auction, however, the DFL managing director was reserved. What Merkel said, however, suggests lively discussions and probably further delays: “We want to address the issue of distribution after the national tender has been concluded.”

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