Psg Standings Rise to Fifth in Forbes With $5.8 Billion Valuation

Psg Standings Rise to Fifth in Forbes With $5.8 Billion Valuation

Paris Saint-Germain climbed to fifth in psg standings in Forbes’ latest ranking of the world’s most valuable football clubs, with an estimated value of $5.8 billion. That is the club’s highest-ever position on the list and a 26 percent year-over-year increase in value. It also puts PSG behind only Real Madrid, Barcelona, Manchester United, and Liverpool.

Luis Enrique and PSG

Luis Enrique guided PSG to its first Champions League title in 2025, and that run came alongside a season that added hard financial numbers to the club’s on-field rise. PSG generated $912 million in revenue and finished runner-up at the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup in the United States.

The club also spent $111 million on transfers, ranking 34th worldwide in transfer investment, before winning Ligue 1 and the French Super Cup. Those results fit a club that has moved from headline spending to a more efficient build, with the current valuation reflecting both trophies and income.

PSG Valuation Growth

The climb looks even sharper against PSG’s recent history. In 2014, the club was valued at about $415 million. It broke into Forbes’ Top 10 in 2021 at $2.5 billion and ninth place, then rose to $4.6 billion and seventh in 2025 before reaching $5.8 billion now.

That means PSG’s value has increased by roughly 1,200 percent over the past 12 years. For a club acquired by Qatar Sports Investments in 2011, the latest ranking shows how far it has moved from the early phase of that project and into the sport’s financial elite.

Forbes Top 10

PSG’s fifth-place finish also separates it from the rest of the pack in the list shown. Bayern Munich, Manchester City, Arsenal, Chelsea, and Tottenham Hotspur all ranked behind it, while PSG’s current position marks the highest point in the club’s valuation climb so far.

For supporters and decision-makers, the immediate takeaway is simple: PSG is no longer chasing a place among football’s richest clubs. It is already there, and the next standard is whether the club can turn its financial weight into sustained European success after the 2025 breakthrough.

Next