Chelsea is the biggest Premier League spenders of all time – and they beat their rivals with a huge margin.
The Club World Cup champions have five Prem titles to show for their enormous edition.
The blues have spent £ 1.3 billion in three years since Todd Boehly took over the club.
And that helped them at the top of the largest spending list of all time.
Their summer edition on signing sessions Joao Pedro, Liam Delap and Jamie Gittens have taken their expenses above £ 4 billion, according to transfer market.
That means that they have spent around £ 1 billion more than their closest rivals, Manchester City.
The Cityzens poops their neighbors Manchester United to second place with £ 300 million.
But the majority of their expenditure has come since 2008, when Sheikh Mansour started his reign as the owner.
City spent £ 3.1 billion compared to the £ 2.8 billion from United, with the rest of the Big Six that forms the top six of the six places.
Liverpool, Arsenal and Tottenham have all marked the £ 2 billion, with the purchases of the Reds of Florian Wirtz, Jeremie Frimpong and Milos Kerkez that they move above the Gunners.
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Tottenham's £ 2 billion spending places them sixth, with Everton, Newcastle, West Ham and Aston Villa who all splash around £ 1.3 billion over the years.
That is the top ten, with the exclusive club consisting of the only teams that have violated £ 1 billion.
Southampton are the next most professional ligate, which has been saying goodbye to £ 840 million since 1992.
Brighton and Bournemouth make the list despite the fact that they only joined the premium for the first time in 2017 and 2015.
While the enormous editions of Nottingham Forest since their return to the top flight in 2022 places them 20th in the list of largest spenders.
Chelsea has made two signing sessions worth more than £ 100 million, Enzo Fernandez and Moises Caicedo, with Romelu Lukaku and Mykhailo Mudryk both close to the three -digit brand.
Their drastic expenditure started under the reign of Roman Abramovich in 2003, but increased dramatically under Todd Boehly.
City does their best to keep pace with them, where they buy players worth £ 203 million in January before a £ 102 million spending this summer, with potentially incoming.
