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Money, money, money. It makes the world go round, and it definitely makes the football world go round.
First there was Willie Groves. Then there was Alf Common. Then Denis Law. Trevor Francis. Paul Pogba. Now, there is Florian Wirtz.
During the 1970s, football transfer fees in Britain began to rise rapidly, but those amounts pale in comparison to today’s figures. Transfers exceeding £100 million have become routine, with Bayer Leverkusen’s Wirtz recently joining Liverpool for up to £116 million, setting a new record.
But how much is each club actually spending? Who have they taken punts on… and have the moves worked out?
Here, Mail Sport rates every Premier League club’s record signing. And no sitting on the fence – it’s either a hit or a miss.

Florian Wirtz has officially joined Liverpool for a British record transfer fee of £116million

Wirtz put pen to paper on a deal that has been one of the most talked about moves of the summer so far

Arne Slot’s men aren’t the only club to have spent big, though – here, we list the record signing of every top-flight side
Arsenal – Declan Rice, £105m
Declan Rice was one of the most sought-after midfielders in world football when he joined Arsenal in the summer of 2023.
After leading West Ham, his childhood team, to victory in the Europa Conference League, he drew interest from clubs like Bayern Munich and Chelsea but chose to fill a significant midfield void for the Gunners with a £105 million transfer, securing his place as a mainstay at the Emirates.
Although he hasn’t guided them to a trophy yet, he remains one of Europe’s top midfielders. He has begun to enhance his scoring ability, netting nine goals last season and establishing himself as a true No. 8 rather than a solely defensive player.
Arsenal fans will remember his two free-kicks against Real Madrid that signalled perhaps the best night at the Emirates, and, at 26, he still has room to get better too.
Verdict: Hit

Arsenal broke the bank to sign Declan Rice from West Ham in 2023, spending £105m
Aston Villa – Amadou Onana, £50m
Amadou Onana (do NOT call him Andre, mate) had outgrown Everton when he moved on a year ago and quickly moved to Aston Villa, with the Toffees needing to sell for financial reasons.
The central midfielder started the season really well, establishing himself as a regular in a team that was competing on a number of fronts. But the odd injury meant his season was stagnated and he failed to regain his form after a setback in November.
A lot to prove and show, but a top talent that Villa will feel the best is yet to come from at 23.
Verdict: Hit

Amadou Onana got off to a flying start at Aston Villa before things slowed down for him
Bournemouth – Evanilson, £40m
It was always going to be a tough task replacing Dominic Solanke at Bournemouth, but Brentford had £65m to spend – and they were going to splash the cash on a new centre forward.
Up stepped Evalison. The Brazilian, leaving fans stunned at his pricey arrival given the club almost collapsed just over a decade prior, left Porto for the south coast and bagged 10 league goals in his first season.
Andoni Iraola will, in truth, want more, but the 25-year-old is often heavily supported in terms of goals by the likes of Antoine Semenyo, James Tavernier and Justin Kluivert.
A good first year, but work still to do.
Verdict: Hit

Evanilson was bought for £40m to replace Dominic Solanke and is expected to kick on further next year
Brentford – Igor Thiago, £31m
You’d be forgiven for asking: who? Like Bournemouth, Brentford needed a new No 9 to fill big shoes last summer and had money ready to spend ahead of the £40m sale of Ivan Toney to the Saudi Pro League.
Who would be Bryan Mbeumo’s new partner in crime? Well, Igor Thiago was the man chosen, signing ahead of time in early 2024. He didn’t officially join until the summer, but he suffered a ligament injury in his right knee in his last game for former side Club Brugge, and then hurt a knee meniscus in pre-season with Brentford.
He didn’t debut until November and then got an infection. The rise of Yoane Wissa helped ease pressure on him to get fit, but he has played just eight times so far and is yet to score for the Bees.
Verdict: Miss

Brentford’s record signing, Igor Thiago, has barely kicked a ball after struggling with injuries
Brighton – Georginio Rutter, £40m
Paying a record fee for an attacking midfielder was always going to be a risk for Brighton considering one of their best players – Joao Pedro – already played in that position.
But it has paid off. Though he missed the end of the season after picking up an ankle injury in March, he chipped in with eight goals before that and became a fan favourite at the Amex and someone Fabian Hurzeler could regularly rely on.
With Pedro linked with an exit, Rutter could kick on even further next season, and perhaps even establish himself as a proper bargain.
Verdict: Hit

Georginio has proved to be a major success after arriving at Brighton from Leeds for £40m
Burnley – Zeki Amdouni, £15.9m
A different Burnley had just been promoted to the Premier League two years ago, playing tidy football under Vincent Kompany in a complete contrast to what top flight fans had become accustomed to under Sean Dyche.
With high hopes, they spent decent money and Zeki Amdouni arrived from Basel in Switzerland, hoping he would lead their attacking charge. Things didn’t go to plan, however – for Burnley or Amdoundi – with the Clarets going straight back down on the back of a dismal top flight campaign.
In that time, the Moroccan scored five league goals in 34 league games, finding himself more in and out of the team as the season progressed. Upon Burnley’s relegation, he left.
He joined Benfica on loan and scored seven goals in 24 games, mostly as a substitute. Upon the expiry of that loan he is now back at Turf Moor – take two begins.
Verdict: Miss

Zaki Amdouni is back at Burnley after leaving the club on loan on the back of their relegation
Chelsea – Moises Caicedo, £115m
The man who is currently the holder of the most expensive transfer in British football history – but not for long.
Eyebrows were raised when Chelsea coughed up a mighty £115m for Moises Caicedo two years ago, with the midfielder rejecting Liverpool to sign for the London club.
At first, he struggled, and the move was looking like a disaster. But it didn’t take too long for him to find his feet, and the Ecuadorian was one of the Premier League’s standout players last season.
Whether it was from right back of defensive midfield, Caicedo found a way to stamp his influence on games and is still only 23.
Verdict: Hit

Moises Caicedo is the most expensive player in the Premier League, but his record is about to be broken
Crystal Palace – Christian Benteke, £32m
The furthest back we have gone so far – back to August 2016, when Christian Benteke arrived at Crystal Palace from Liverpool.
He had endured a tough time at Anfield after impressing at Aston Villa. Still, he was hoping to inject live back into his career and he did just that at Selhurst Park. The Belgian scored 37 times across 177 appearances for Palace, shining during the Covid period.
The big man will always be known for his late winner against Brighton in the 2020-21 season, and he eventually left in 2022 to join DC United in the MLS.
Verdict: Hit

Christian Benteke remains Crystal Palace’s record signing despite joining back in 2016
Everton – Gylfi Sigurdsson, £45m
Gylfi Sigurdsson was another player who was looking to climb the ranks again, having rejoined Swansea City on the back of a quiet period at Tottenham. He made the leap, though, to Everton in August 2017 in what was meant to be the start of an exciting period under Farhad Moshiri.
Recruitment was muddled, however, with no real plan seemingly in place and Wayne Rooney and Davy Klaassen – also No 10s – also signing that summer despite the Toffees’ defensive struggles.
The now-35-year-old failed to pull up too many trees in Everton blue, but did play more than 150 games for the club. That was until he didn’t feature during the last year of his contract, with a reason why never officially revealed.
Verdict: Miss

Gylfi Sigurdsson never really hit the ground running at Everton after arriving in a curious transfer window
Fulham – Emile Smith Rowe, £35m
Perhaps the harshest call on this list, Emile Smith Rowe, like many others, had a mixed first season with the Cottagers after making the leap from boyhood club Arsenal.
Called up by England in 2021 and breaking into the Arsenal team, the world seemed the midfielder’s oyster until injury curtailed his progress and he struggled to get back into the reckoning.
Arsenal reluctantly sold him to Fulham, and he started like a steam train after Marco Silva described his arrival as a ‘statement signing’. But things slowed down, and he managed six goals in his debut year.
Silva has called for more consistency next season, so there is still time to turn the ‘miss’ verdict around.
Verdict: Miss

Fulham are expecting more from Emile Smith Rowe next term after his arrival from Arsenal
Leeds – Georginio Rutter, £35.5m
The only man to feature twice on this list, but in two different ways. Leeds spent big on Rutter to bring him in from Hoffenheim but it was wrong place, wrong time for the player.
An unknown attacking midfielder, he penned five-and-a-half year deal in January 2023 but struggled to help the Whites stay up, and they were relegated with Rutter struggling for minutes.
He didn’t leave right away, though, and improved in the Championship, proving a reliable player for Daniel Farke as one of the best players in the second division before making the jump to Brighton last summer.
Verdict: Miss

Rutter wasn’t great at Leeds, but kicked on once he departed Elland Road for Brighton
Liverpool – Darwin Nunez, £85m
This was the Premier League champions’ most-expensive signing before Wirtz. What could have been. Nunez tore Liverpool apart at Anfield when playing for Benfica, and his pace and power resulted in the Reds splashing out over £80m to make him their new No 9.
Liverpool fans were excited and compared Nunez to Erling Haaland, who arrived at the same time. He got off on the front foot, scoring in the Community Shield win over Manchester City, before things went slightly wrong.
He was sent off for headbutting Joachim Andersen just a matter of games into his Liverpool career and, despite heroic moments against the likes of Newcastle and Brentford, his poor form and notable misses have meant his Anfield career could well be over.
He has scored 40 goals in three years – and may not get another. Unfortunately for Nunez – as he’s used to – it’s a miss. And he will be pleased to no longer hold this accolade.
Verdict: Miss

Darwin Nunez is the former record holder for Liverpool – overtaken after Wirtz joined the Reds
Manchester City – Jack Grealish, £100m
Jack Grealish’s Manchester City career seems to be coming to a sorry end, with the forward left out of Pep Guardiola’s squad for the Club World Cup after his boss told him to find another club.
He was the Premier League’s hottest property when he swapped Aston Villa for City in 2021, becoming the most expensive English player of all time – a record now broken by Rice. He has gone onto win five major trophies, including both the Premier League and Champions League, but many are of the opinion that his days as a maverick wide star are long behind him.
Just seven starts came last year, and, despite the team success he has contributed to, it’s hard to argue that he hasn’t failed to live up to expectations – whether that’s his fault or not.
Verdict: Miss

Jack Grealish is set to leave Manchester City this summer after Pep Guardiola told him to look for a new club
Manchester United – Paul Pogba, £100m
Is there anything more Manchester United than losing one of your most talented academy players ever for next to nothing, seeing him become a success elsewhere and signing him back for £100m, only for it to not work out?
It was a world record transfer fee that the Red Devils paid to get Paul Pogba back from Juventus, and he spent six years at United without really doing too much.
Some called his attitude into question, and his inconsistencies were big red flags for many before United eventually cut their losses in 2022, when he left for nothing.
Verdict: Miss

Manchester United resigned Paul Pogba for £100m after letting him go for next to nothing
Newcastle – Alexander Isak, £60m
Newcastle coughed up £60m for Alexander Isak in 2022 and it’s probably one of the best signings they have ever made.
He was impressing at Real Sociedad but his fitness record was a huge concern, with Callum Wilson already missing plenty of game time through injury. But the calculated gamble has paid off in style, and the Swede is now one of the best strikers on the planet.
He has scored 21 and 23 Premier League goals in the last two seasons respectively, and the Magpies will be happy they have him tied down to a deal that runs until 2029, because the sharks aren’t going to stop circling. Liverpool continue to be linked.
Verdict: Hit

Alexander Isak has become one of the best strikers in the world – Newcastle paid just £60m for his services
Nottingham Forest – Elliot Anderson, £35m
Elliot Anderson only joined Nottingham Forest because of risks of PSR ruling breaches. He was a Magpie through and through, but made the leap and has only kicked on from the exciting start he had made to his career on Tyneside.
Odysseas Vlachodimos – remember him? – went the other way for £20m, but that has only represented major success for Nuno Espirito Santo and his men because they now have a gem on their hands.
Versatile and still just 22, Anderson will be in the England set-up before you know it and could well leave the City Ground for a much larger fee in the near future.
Verdict: Hit

Elliot Andersen was part of a PSR loophole but has become one of the best midfielders in the Premier League
Sunderland – Didier Ndong, £13.5m (until Enzo Le Fee..)
Without doubt the worst signing on this list – and Sunderland will be glad that last year’s loanee star Enzo Le Fee has now broken the club record, making his temporary stay from Roma permanent for £19m.
But we’ve got to discuss Ndong. He stood as Sunderland’s record signing for nine years, having joined in 2016 when the Black Cats were relegated from the top flight. He stuck around when they were relegated, too – playing a total of 54 times.
His contract was terminated in 2018 when he failed to turn up for training for months on end. Sunderland were in League One at the time, and managed to get him off their wage bill ahead of the climb that saw them return back to the top flight for this season.
Verdict: Miss

Didier Ndong was sacked by Sunderland in 2018 after failing to turn up to training for a number of months
Tottenham – Dominic Solanke, £65m
Dominic Solanke scored 16 goals in 45 games for Tottenham in his first year after joining from Bournemouth, with nine of those coming in the Premier League.
Five, though, came in the Europa League, which helped Ange Postecoglou’s side end their 17-year trophy drought.
He – and Spurs – would have hoped for a better goal return, but it was a season badly impacted by injury and his work off the ball and record in big games aren’t to scoff at.
A fully fit Solanke, playing under a new manager that did wonders for the likes of Mbeumo, Wissa and Ollie Watkins, could prove to be a real star.
Verdict: Hit

Dominic Solanke had a good first season at Tottenham but is expected to kick on next year
West Ham – Lucas Paqueta, £51m
It’s certainly still one that could go either way. In terms of pure football ability, Lucas Paqueta is West Ham’s best player and he has shown that on more than one occasion.
His name is etched in history after assisting Jarrod Bowen’s winner in the Conference League final in 2023, and he could have moved to Manchester City that summer. But things seemed to fall apart when an investigation into alleged breaches of betting roles commenced.
He will continue to play a key role for the Hammers until he either moves on or isn’t allowed to play – and there has been no sign that that will happen so far. He has been charged by the FA, but denies them and continues to fight to clear his name.
Verdict: Hit

Lucas Paqueta is West Ham’s best player, but is the subject of an investigation in illegal betting activity

Matheus Cunha left Wolves for Manchester United, with his former side selling him on for a solid profit
Wolves – Mateus Cunha, £44m
Another sour end to what was an electric spell, Matheus Cunha has now moved onto pastures new after forcing his way out of Molineux for a move to Manchester United.
He spent two years with Wolves as a permanent player, first joining on loan, enduring a slow start until he established himself as Wolves’ most talented player, if a little hot-headed at times.
The Brazilian had notches 29 goals in 83 Premier League games by the time he left, and won the hearts of fans, who still cheered his name after it became clear he would be leaving.
Verdict: Hit