TL;DR: Cymru Premier clubs generate revenue from five core streams: broadcast deals (£80-120K per club), matchday income (£30-60K), commercial partnerships (£30K-£500K+), FAW/Sport Wales grants (9-23% of revenue), and sporadic player sales. TNS lead at an estimated £3.2M annually, but the median club operates on closer to £400-600K. Understanding these streams — and where they are under-activated — is the starting point for any serious investment thesis.
The Revenue Landscape in Welsh Football
The Cymru Premier is not a league where broadcast riches flow evenly. Unlike the English Premier League's centralised distribution model, Welsh top-flight clubs piece together income from a patchwork of sources — each with its own ceiling, risk profile, and growth potential. For investors evaluating club acquisition opportunities, revenue composition matters more than headline turnover.
TNS sit at the top with an estimated £3.2M in annual revenue, a figure that reflects European prize money, a full-time playing model, and mature commercial operations. Connah's Quay follow at approximately £1.8M, driven by a well-run foundation structure and consistent European qualification. Penybont, with revenue around £1.4M, have grown rapidly through smart commercial activation. The remainder of the league operates in the £300K-£800K range, with significant variance depending on location, ownership ambition, and infrastructure quality.
The league's expansion from 12 to 16 clubs in 2026/27 will reshape this picture — more fixtures mean more matchday revenue, more broadcast exposure, and wider sponsorship inventory. But first, investors need to understand the current state of play.
Revenue Stream Analysis
Broadcast Revenue: The Reliable Floor
| Component | Annual Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| S4C/Sgorio domestic deal | £80-120K per club | Evenly distributed across league |
| European broadcasting rights | £50-200K per qualifying club | Dependent on round progression |
| UEFA solidarity payments | £10-30K | For clubs eliminated in early rounds |
| Highlights and digital rights | £5-15K | Growing but still modest |
The S4C/Sgorio partnership is the single most important revenue equaliser in the Cymru Premier. Every club receives between £80K and £120K per season from the domestic broadcast agreement — a figure that has grown approximately 15% over the past three seasons as Welsh-language football coverage has expanded its audience.
For clubs that qualify for European competition, broadcasting revenue can effectively double. TNS, who regularly reach the UEFA Conference League group stages or later qualifying rounds, have earned upwards of £200K in a single European campaign from broadcast-related income alone. Connah's Quay and Bala Town have also benefited, though their European runs tend to be shorter. For a deeper look at how European qualification drives financial returns, see our European qualification investment analysis.
The limitation of broadcast revenue is its ceiling. Even with European participation, no Cymru Premier club earns more than approximately £320K from broadcasting in a single season. This makes it a solid floor — not a growth engine.
Matchday Revenue: Attendance-Dependent and Under-Optimised
| Club Tier | Avg. Attendance | Ticket Price | Est. Season Matchday Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top tier (TNS, Connah's Quay) | 600-900 | £10-12 | £55-80K |
| Mid tier (Penybont, Caernarfon, Bala) | 400-600 | £8-10 | £30-50K |
| Lower tier (Aberystwyth, Flint) | 200-400 | £8-10 | £15-30K |
| League average | 400-600 | £8-12 | £30-60K |
Matchday revenue is the most visible income stream but often the most constrained. With average attendance across the Cymru Premier sitting at 400-600, and ticket prices ranging from £8-12, the arithmetic limits most clubs to £30-60K per season from gate receipts alone.
However, matchday revenue extends beyond tickets. Food and beverage, programme sales, 50/50 draws, and increasingly, hospitality packages contribute an additional 20-40% on top of gate receipts at well-run clubs. TNS's Park Hall facility, for example, generates meaningful corporate hospitality income on matchdays — a model that other clubs could replicate with relatively modest investment in covered seating and catering facilities.
The Wrexham effect has demonstrated that attendance at Welsh football clubs is not fixed. Clubs across the Cymru Premier have reported 30-50% year-on-year attendance growth as the broader narrative around Welsh football investment has gained traction. Caernarfon Town, profiled in our club investment analysis, have been among the biggest beneficiaries of this trend.
For investors, matchday revenue is the stream most directly responsive to ownership-driven improvements. Better facilities, improved marketing, and enhanced matchday experience all translate into higher per-head spend and repeat attendance. Our matchday revenue optimisation guide details specific tactics.
Commercial Revenue: The Widest Gap, the Biggest Opportunity
| Club | Est. Commercial Revenue | Key Deals |
|---|---|---|
| TNS | £400-500K+ | Stadium naming rights, shirt sponsor, multiple corporate partners |
| Connah's Quay | £150-250K | Foundation-linked partnerships, regional sponsors |
| Penybont | £100-180K | Growing corporate base, stadium partnerships |
| Typical mid-table club | £30-80K | Local business sponsors, kit deals |
| Newly promoted club | £15-30K | Minimal commercial activation |
Commercial revenue is where the Cymru Premier's financial hierarchy is most pronounced — and where the growth opportunity is largest. TNS generate upwards of £500K through a sophisticated commercial operation that includes stadium naming rights, tiered sponsorship packages, and corporate hospitality. Most clubs in the league activate fewer than five of the roughly 30 available sponsorship categories.
The sponsorship categories available to a typical Cymru Premier club include shirt front, shirt back, shorts, training kit, stadium naming, stand naming, matchday programme, matchday sponsor, man of the match, ball sponsor, dugout sponsor, scoreboard sponsor, website sponsor, social media partner, academy sponsor, community partner, and various perimeter board positions. The full inventory is detailed in our sponsorship inventory audit template.
For a prospective investor, commercial revenue is the stream most responsive to professional management. Hiring a dedicated commercial manager — a role that costs £25-35K annually — can unlock £50-150K in new sponsorship revenue within the first 12 months. Our commercial manager guide outlines the business case.
The sponsorship costs analysis shows current market rates across the league, while our sponsorship guide provides a comprehensive framework for brands considering Welsh football partnerships.
Grants and Public Funding: The Non-Dilutive Capital
| Grant Source | Typical Value | Eligibility | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| FAW participation grants | £20-50K | All licensed clubs | Coaching, youth development |
| Sport Wales capital grants | £50-200K | Application-based | Infrastructure, facility upgrades |
| Welsh Government community grants | £10-50K | Community-focused clubs | Community engagement programmes |
| UEFA solidarity payments | £10-30K | European qualifiers | Club development |
| Local authority grants | £5-20K | Varies by region | Facility maintenance, pitch access |
Grants from the FAW, Sport Wales, and various government bodies contribute 9-23% of total revenue for Cymru Premier clubs. For smaller clubs operating on budgets of £300-500K, this can represent the difference between solvency and financial distress.
FAW participation grants support coaching infrastructure and youth development, typically worth £20-50K per club. Sport Wales capital grants, which fund facility improvements, can be significantly larger — £50-200K for major infrastructure projects such as 3G pitch installations or floodlight upgrades. These grants are non-dilutive: they do not require equity surrender, making them particularly valuable for investor-backed clubs looking to accelerate facility development.
The key consideration is that grant funding is often tied to community outcomes. Clubs that can demonstrate youth participation growth, community engagement, and broader social impact tend to receive more generous allocations. This aligns naturally with the community ownership models that several Welsh clubs have adopted.
Player Sales: Sporadic but Potentially Transformative
| Transfer | Estimated Fee | Selling Club | Buying Club |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recent notable sales | £25-75K typical | Various Cymru Premier | English League One/Two |
| Academy graduates to EFL | £10-50K + sell-on | Cardiff Met, Haverfordwest | Various |
| Free agent departures | £0 (training compensation only) | Multiple clubs | English lower leagues |
Player sales are the most unpredictable revenue stream in Welsh football but can be transformative when they occur. The typical Cymru Premier transfer fee ranges from £0-50K, but the real value often lies in sell-on clauses and training compensation — mechanisms that can generate revenue years after a player departs.
TNS and Connah's Quay have the strongest track records of selling players into the English football league system. Cardiff Met's university model, which produces players at minimal cost and develops them through competitive football, offers a template for talent-driven revenue generation. Our talent pipeline guide and scouting report cover this pathway in detail.
For investors, player development is a medium-term strategy. It requires investment in coaching, scouting, and facilities but can yield returns that exceed the initial outlay many times over. The academy analysis identifies which clubs are best positioned to exploit this pathway.
Revenue Composition by Club Profile
Understanding how revenue streams combine across different club profiles helps investors identify where value creation opportunities are concentrated.
| Revenue Stream | Top Club (TNS) | Mid-Table Club | Newly Promoted Club |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broadcast | £200-320K (10%) | £80-120K (20%) | £80-100K (30%) |
| Matchday | £55-80K (2%) | £30-50K (8%) | £15-25K (8%) |
| Commercial | £400-500K (15%) | £30-80K (10%) | £15-30K (8%) |
| Grants | £100-200K (6%) | £80-120K (20%) | £50-80K (22%) |
| European/Player Sales | £1.5-2M+ (62%) | £0-30K (5%) | £0 (0%) |
| Estimated Total | £3.0-3.2M | £400-600K | £250-350K |
The disparity is stark. TNS generate more from European competition and commercial deals alone than most clubs earn in total. But this gap also defines the opportunity: a club operating on £400K with a commercial operation that generates only £40K has substantial room for growth before it reaches structural limits.
The Expansion Effect
The Cymru Premier's expansion to 16 clubs for the 2026/27 season will materially alter the revenue landscape. More clubs means more fixtures per season (30 league matches instead of 22 in the current format), which directly lifts matchday revenue. The expanded league also increases broadcast content, strengthening the FAW's negotiating position in the next S4C/Sgorio deal.
For clubs currently outside the top flight, promotion into an expanded league represents a step-change in revenue potential. Our expansion guide details which promoted clubs are best positioned financially.
What This Means for Investors
The Cymru Premier revenue model is characterised by a stable but low floor (broadcast), a constrained but improvable middle (matchday), and a high-ceiling but under-activated top (commercial). The clubs best positioned for revenue growth are those with strong community roots, adequate infrastructure, and professional commercial operations — or those where an investor can install these capabilities.
For the full financial picture including balance sheets and debt profiles, see our Companies House filings analysis. For club-by-club investment assessments, consult the club investment profiles.
Methodology: Revenue estimates are derived from Companies House filings (where available), FAW financial statements, S4C/Sgorio broadcast data, Transfermarkt squad valuations, and Cymru Connect's proprietary analysis of matchday attendance and commercial partnerships. All figures represent the 2025-26 season unless otherwise stated. Individual club figures are estimates based on available public data and should be verified through direct due diligence.




