Juventus loss shrinks up to 58 million euros with a Champions League boost


Juventus achieved a loss of 58 million euros ($ 68 million) in the tax year ending on 30 June, versus a loss of 199 million euros a year earlier, when the Italian club returned to Europe Lucrative Club Competition Champions League.

The turnover at the Turin, which also benefited from participating in the extensive FIFA Club World Cup, rose to 529 million euros in the period, of 394 million euros the year earlier.

Juventus said in a statement that it has taken around 102 million euros from the broadcasting rights and ticket sales of Champions League and the incomes arising from the World Cup of Club.

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After having dominated the Italian football landscape for almost a decade until 2020, Juventus was hit by an accounting scandal linked to player trade and salary payments, which resulted in a ban on European competitions in the 2023/2024 season.

The club said that it is now expected a limited improvement of the results and the cash flow in the current tax year, making it close to Breakeven in the 2026/2027. The image is a bit more careful than the previous prediction, which was aimed at a return to win in the 2026/2027 season.

The club booked its last annual net profit in the 2016/2017 season.

Juventus, who has been checked by the Agnelli family for a century, said that the board will propose shareholders to approve a share capital increase to 110 million euros. Exor, the Holdingmaatschappij van de Agnellis established in the Netherlands, has already paid almost 30 million euros with that capital increase.

Published on 27 September 2025



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