Full figures: What Sundowns can bank from Club World Cup

With record prize money on offer at the Club World Cup, here is what Mamelodi Sundowns stand to earn later this year.

Full figures: What Sundowns can bank from Club World Cup

Earlier this week, the FIFA Club World Cup organisers revealed a lucrative prize money allocation for the 32 participating clubs, plus a substantial and groundbreaking global solidarity model, and which will certainly have relevance for Mamelodi Sundowns.

The perennial league champions are set to head to America later this year as the sole South African representative at the Club World Cup, and as seen below, there will be everything to play for.

  • Participation Fee: $9.55m – R174m
  • Group Stage win bonus + $1m per draw: $2m – R36m
  • Round of 16: $7,5m – R137m
  • Quarterfinal: $13.125m – R237m
  • Semi-Final: $21m- R383m
  • Runner Up: $30m – R547m
  • Winners: $40m – R729m

FIGURES TO NOTE AS SUNDOWNS HEAD TOWARDS THE CLUB WORLD CUP

The distribution model for the 2025 edition will comprise the following pillars:

Total prize money pot: $1 billion, comprised of a sporting performance pillar of $475million and a participation pillar of $525 million.

Sporting performance pillar: $475 million

StagePer club
Group Stage (three matches)USD 2.0 million win/1.0 million draw per club
Round of 16+ USD 7.5 million
Quarter-Final+ USD 13.125 million
Semi-Final+ USD 21.0 million
Finalist+ USD 30.0 million
Winner+ USD 40.0 million

Participation pillar: USD 525 million

ContinentPer club
EuropeUSD 12.81-38.19 million *
South AmericaUSD 15.21 million
North, Central American & CaribbeanUSD 9.55 million
AsiaUSD 9.55 million
AfricaUSD 9.55 million
OceaniaUSD 3.58 million

*Determined by a ranking based on sporting and commercial criteria

Speaking on the solidarity model, FIFA President Gianni Infantino stated: “In addition to the prize money for the participating teams, there is an unprecedented solidarity investment programme where we have a target of an additional 250 million dollars being provided to club football across the world. This solidarity will undoubtedly provide a significant boost in our ongoing efforts in making football truly global.

“Not only that, but FIFA will neither retain any funding for this tournament, as all revenues will be distributed to club football, nor will it touch FIFA’s reserves, which are set aside for global football development through the 211 FIFA Member Associations.”

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