The Mag
·10 de junio de 2025
First summer transfer window now closed – Over £428m spent on 24 Premier League signings

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Yahoo sportsThe Mag
·10 de junio de 2025
Listed below are the Premier League signings completed in the first summer 2025 transfer window.
This first (of two) Premier League transfer window of the summer opened on 1 June and it closed at 7pm last night (Tuesday 10 June)
The second Premier League transfer window then opens on 16 June and runs through until 7pm on 1 September.
So this first summer 2025 transfer window closed yesterday, then a six day gap before we have another 78 days of fun in the second window.
Listed below are all the Premier League signings made in that first window.
The stats are via BBC Sport and Sky Sports, as we now reach 11 June 2025:
Marcus Bettinelli (Chelsea – Manchester City) £0.5m
Rayan Cherki (Lyon – Manchester City) £34m
9 June 2025:
Rayan Ait-Nouri (Wolves to Man City) £31m
Mamadou Sarr (Strasbourg to Chelsea) £12m
5 June 2025:
Antonio Cordero (Malaga to Newcastle United) Development compensation to be agreed.
4 June 2025
Liam Delap (Ipswich to Chelsea) £30m
3 June 2025:
Caoimhin Kelleher (Liverpool to Brentford) £12.5m
2 June 2025:
Romelle Donovan (Birmingham to Brentford) £3m
1 June 2025:
Yoon Doyoung (Daejeon Hana Citizen to Brighton) £2m
Michael Kayode (Fiorentina to Brentford) £15m
Tom Watson (Sunderland to Brighton) £10m
Matheus Cunha (Wolves to Man U) £62.5m
Bashir Humphrey (Chelsea to Burnley) £14m
Jaidon Anthony ( Bournemouth to Burnley) £7m
Marcus Edwards (Sporting to Burnley) £10m
Zian Flemming (Millwall to Burnley) £7m
Estevao Willian (Palmeiras to Chelsea) £29m
Charly Alcaraz (Flamengo to Everton) £12.6m
Jeremie Frimpong (Bayer Leverkusen to Liverpool) £29.5m
Enzo La Fee (Roma to Sunderland) £20m
Kevin Danso (Lens to Tottenham) £21m
Luka Vuskovic (Hajduk Split to Tottenham) £12m
Dario Essugo (Sporting to Chelsea) £18m
Jean-Clair Todibo (Nice to West Ham) £36m
I make that in total £428.5m minimum on the 24 incoming Premier League signings listed above, that figure doesn’t though include whatever development compensation Newcastle will end up paying for Cordero.
Usually no official Premier League signings can be registered by this point in the year, these deals allowed to be made official so early as a special favour to those club taking part in the (ridiculous waste of time that is the…) FIFA Club World Cup.
No surprise to me if overall this summer we see all records broken for Premier League summer transfer spend, with already a starting point of close to half a billion.
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