Last season, the Red Devils recorded revenues of £666.5M but reported a loss of £33m for the financial year, and achieved total revenues of £140.3m for Q1 of 2026.
The Premier League side achieved an operating profit of £13.3M compared to a £6.9M loss from the same period last year. This is despite not having European football and shows the drastic impact of making so many cutbacks over the past season.
CEO Omar Berrada spoke on the first quarter, praising the side after so much of the club was streamlined from the top down.
"These robust financial results reflect the resilience of Manchester United as we make strong progress in our transformation of the club.
"The difficult decisions we have made in the past year have resulted in a sustainably lower cost base and a more streamlined, effective organisation equipped to drive the club towards improved sporting and commercial performance over the long term.
"That has helped us to invest in our men’s and women’s teams, sitting in sixth and third places in the Premier League and women’s Super League respectively.”
Without European football there has been a deduction of 2 per cent in revenues and as manager Ruben Amorim and his side sit in sixth, that will be his main target to help the club get back to where they once were.
United next face the likes of Bournemouth, Aston Villa, Newcastle United and Wolves in what is a good string of games that could push the club into the top four.
