THE Premier League’s “Big Six” are in line to receive an even bigger chunk of prize money, a report claims.
England’s top flight operates on a system of 1.6:1 and Manchester City last season took £161.3million in prize money for winning the league.
This means they earned 1.6 times the £100.3m that 20th-placed Southampton did.
But according to the Daily Telegraph, this format could now be ripped up – and the Big Six stand to profit under a revised model.
The report claims from the 2025-26 season, Premier League prize money is set to be distributed via a 1.8:1 ratio.
It would pave the way for potentially tens of extra millions going to the league’s biggest sides.
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The revised “calibration” is down to the Consumer Prices Index and the international growth of the Premier League.
This comes just days after Everton were hit with a ten-point deduction for breaching Premier League profit and sustainability rules.
As a result, it plunged the Toffees into 19th and facing a relegation battle.
They could also face a further nine-point deduction if three clubs are successful in £300million worth of compensation claims.
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Everton confirmed they will appeal the verdict in the strongest possible way.
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The report does add that a higher rate of inflation could mean smaller clubs get a more favourable rate next season.
All Prem clubs are preparing to radically change the league on Tuesday when they are due to vote on a New Deal For Football.
The EFL is due to get an extra £130m in funding – but the exact nature of how that money is made up remains undecided.
Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk