Key Points
- Nine Premier League teams have yet to secure front-of-shirt sponsorship arrangements for the 2026/27 campaign
- Alternative sponsorship agreements are valued at approximately 50% of previous betting company contracts
- Total financial impact across the league may exceed £80 million for the upcoming season
- Financial technology and services companies like CMC Markets are positioning themselves as gambling sponsor replacements
- Elite clubs maintain stable revenues while middle and lower-ranked teams absorb the heaviest losses
English football’s top tier faces a significant revenue challenge as new restrictions on gambling partnerships begin to take effect. The prohibition on front-of-shirt betting sponsors kicks in next season, leaving numerous clubs scrambling for alternative revenue sources.
Reporting from The Guardian indicates that nine teams remain without confirmed shirt sponsors for the 2026/27 campaign, with twelve clubs total yet to finalize replacement agreements.
The restriction came through voluntary industry agreement after discussions with government officials. It eliminates what has been among the most lucrative commercial revenue streams for England’s premier football competition.
Betting operators, particularly those focused on Asian markets, have historically paid substantial premiums for the worldwide exposure that Premier League shirt placement provides. Their departure has left a commercial void that other sectors are hesitant to fill at comparable rates.
Sean Connell, who serves as Editor at The Sponsor, indicates clubs previously partnered with gambling firms face an average 38% reduction in front-of-shirt valuation when transitioning to non-betting brands.
Speaking anonymously to The Sponsor, one club’s commercial director revealed their strongest proposal from a non-gambling company came in at less than 50% of their existing arrangement.
A senior executive told The Guardian that revenue losses are affecting “nearly everyone.” According to this source, clubs outside the traditional top six are seeing sponsorship proposals decline by roughly half.
Another club official projected the aggregate revenue reduction across all affected teams could hit £80 million in the coming season.
Initial Replacement Agreements Reveal Significant Value Decline
Several clubs have already finalized new partnerships, though the financial details highlight the scale of the downturn.
Bournemouth confirmed that Vitality, currently their stadium naming rights partner, will transition to front-of-shirt sponsorship under revised terms. Brentford is reportedly finalizing an arrangement with Indeed, which already sponsors their training apparel.
Both agreements are understood to fall in the £4 million to £5 million annual range—substantially below what their previous gambling partnerships generated.
Connell’s analysis suggests Bournemouth’s reported £6.1 million yearly contract with BJ88 exceeded fair market valuation by 49%, making the comparative decline even more pronounced.
Finance Sector Emerges as Gambling Replacement
Financial services companies are showing growing interest in the sponsorship opportunities created by gambling’s exit. Industry sources indicate that Everton and Fulham are conducting advanced negotiations with CMC Markets for shirt sponsorship packages potentially valued at £50 million across three seasons.
Multiple clubs already maintain relationships with financial sector partners. Brighton holds an extensive agreement with American Express. Tottenham partners with insurance provider AIA. Liverpool’s association with Standard Chartered continues.
The league’s elite six clubs remain largely insulated from the disruption. Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester City, and Manchester United each maintain partnerships valued between £50 million and £60 million annually. Tottenham’s £40 million yearly AIA contract extends through the next campaign.
Chelsea represents an outlier, having begun three consecutive seasons without shirt sponsorship before securing short-duration agreements.
Mid-ranking and lower-positioned clubs bear the heaviest burden. Some are investigating alternative arrangements, including relocating gambling partners to sleeve positions, which remain permissible under current regulations.
Everton and West Ham are reportedly pursuing this sleeve sponsorship strategy with their betting partners. Newcastle recently finalized a pitch-side advertising contract with 8Xbet.
Early indicators suggest displaced betting operators may redirect their marketing budgets toward the English Football League, where shirt sponsorship continues under existing arrangements with Sky Bet extending through 2029.
