FIFA report new record for January transfer moves despite spending drop

Brazilian clubs made their way into the top three this year thanks to Flamengo's signing of Lucas Paqueta
Brazilian clubs made their way into the top three this year thanks to Flamengo's signing of Lucas PaquetaReuters / Aline Massuca

Football clubs worldwide set a new winter transfer window record in terms of the number of transactions completed, according to a statement released by FIFA on Thursday, but the overall amount spent was down compared to last year's high.

The January 2026 window saw a three per cent increase in the number of transfers compared to the previous record set the year before with more than 5,900 international transactions completed.

However, with a total of over $1.9 billion (£1.4bn) spent, the cumulative amount splashed out on transfer fees is down by 18 per cent compared to the record set in January 2025 ($2.35bn, £1.7bn).

English clubs were by far the biggest spenders, with more than $363m (£267.7m) in compensation paid, a significant drop from 2025 ($623m, £459.6m), but still far ahead of Italian clubs ($283m, £208.7m) in second place.

Brazilian clubs made their way into the top three this year, with $180m (£132.8m) spent - some $49m (£36m) of which came courtesy of Flamengo's signing of Lucas Paqueta from Premier League side West Ham.

Saudi clubs, fourth-heaviest spenders last year ($213m, £157m), slipped to sixth place on $101m (£74.5m).

Just like last year, French clubs led the way in terms of transfer revenue, with a total of $218m (£160.8m) received ($373m, £275m in January 2025), ahead of their Italian, Brazilian, English and Spanish counterparts.

In women's football, a new spending record was set, with more than $10m (£7.3m) spent in January, an 85 per cent jump from last year's record, despite a six per cent drop in the number of transfers (420 in January 2026).

Once again, English clubs spent the most, splashing out more than $5m (£3.7m).