Tottenham Hotspur players Salary

Tottenham Hotspur operates a £127.6 million wage bill for 2025-26, ranking 6th in the Premier League. 

Xavi Simons and Cristian Romero lead Spurs at £200,000 weekly (£10.4 million annually), with James Maddison close behind at £8.8 million. 

The club employs 28 first-team players with an average salary of £87,500 per week, above the Premier League’s £57,700 average.

Explore Tottenham stars’ complete career histories through their detailed player biography and net worth profiles.

Player Name Position Nationality
Guglielmo Vicario Goalkeeper Italy
Fraser Forster Goalkeeper England
Antonín Kinsky Goalkeeper Czech Rep.
Brandon Austin Goalkeeper England
Alfie Whiteman Goalkeeper England
Sergio Reguilón Defender Spain
Kevin Danso Defender Austria
Radu Dragusin Defender Romania
Destiny Udogie Defender Italy
Cristian Romero Defender Argentina
Pedro Porro Defender Spain
Djed Spence Defender England
Ben Davies Defender Wales
Micky van de Ven Defender Netherlands
Dante Cassanova Defender England
Malachi Hardy Defender England
Luka Vuskovic Defender Croatia
Yves Bissouma Midfielder Mali
James Maddison Midfielder England
Archie Gray Midfielder England
Lucas Bergvall Midfielder Sweden
Dejan Kulusevski Midfielder Sweden
Pape Sarr Midfielder Senegal
Rodrigo Bentancur Midfielder Uruguay
Rio Kyerematen Midfielder England
Callum Olusesi Midfielder England
Son Heung-Min Forward South Korea
Richarlison Forward Brazil
Mathys Tel Forward France
Timo Werner Forward Germany
Dominic Solanke Forward England
Brennan Johnson Forward Wales
Wilson Odobert Forward France
Dane Scarlett Forward England
Mikey Moore Forward England
Damola Ajayi Forward England

Top 10 Highest-Paid Tottenham Hotspur Players

Spurs’ wage structure prioritizes defensive solidity and creative midfielders under Ange Postecoglou’s attacking philosophy.

Player Position Weekly Salary Annual Salary Contract Until
Xavi Simons Midfielder £200,000 £10.4 million 2030
Cristian Romero Defender £200,000 £10.4 million 2029
James Maddison Midfielder £170,000 £8.8 million 2028
João Palhinha Midfielder £164,000 £8.6 million 2026
Randal Kolo Muani Forward £150,000 £7.8 million 2026
Mohammed Kudus Midfielder £150,000 £7.8 million 2031
Dejan Kulusevski Winger £110,000 £5.7 million 2028
Richarlison Forward £90,000 £4.7 million 2027
Dominic Solanke Forward £90,000 £4.7 million 2030
Pedro Porro Defender £85,000 £4.4 million 2028

Simons and Romero’s equal £10.4 million salaries demonstrate balanced investment in midfield creativity and defensive leadership.

Richest Tottenham Hotspur Players by Net Worth

Player Position Estimated Net Worth Age Previous Major Clubs
Son Heung-min Forward £82 million 33 Hamburg, Bayer Leverkusen
James Maddison Midfielder £43 million 28 Leicester City
Richarlison Forward £35 million 28 Everton, Watford
Cristian Romero Defender £22 million 27 Atalanta, Juventus
Dejan Kulusevski Winger £18 million 25 Juventus, Parma

Son accumulated £82 million through Tottenham’s £10.2 million annual salaries over ten seasons plus endorsements with Adidas, Gillette, and Calvin Klein worth £4 million yearly. 

Maddison built £43 million from Leicester’s £5.7 million yearly wages before Tottenham’s £8.8 million contract secured in 2023.

Premier League Wage Bill Rankings

Tottenham’s £127.6 million expenditure positions them 6th in England, below Chelsea (£151.3 million) and ahead of Newcastle (£98 million). 

The wage bill represents approximately 61% of Manchester City’s £209.7 million spending while maintaining top-four qualification ambitions. 

Spurs’ £87,500 average weekly salary exceeds the Premier League standard by 51.6%, reflecting their established European competition credentials.

Position-Based Salary Distribution

Tottenham’s wage allocation emphasizes midfield creativity and defensive stability supporting Postecoglou’s high-pressing system.

Midfield Investment: £45.8 million combined — Simons, Maddison, Palhinha, Kudus, Bentancur lead spending.

Forward Wages: £39.5 million total — Kolo Muani, Richarlison, Solanke, Kulusevski dominating attacking allocation.

Defensive Spending: £41.9 million combined — Romero, Porro, Van de Ven, Udogie highest earners.

Goalkeeping: £6.2 million total — Vicario £3.9M, Forster £2M establishing clear hierarchy.

The midfield-heavy allocation reflects Spurs’ possession-based philosophy requiring technical quality and creative playmaking throughout the squad.

Contract Bonuses and Incentive Structures

Tottenham structures contracts with Champions League qualification bonuses rewarding top-four finishes. 

Champions League entry adds approximately £300,000-600,000 per player when secured, with Europa League qualification providing £150,000-400,000 bonuses. 

Knockout stage progression bonuses pay £200,000-500,000 for reaching round-of-16, supplemented by per-win incentives of £50,000-100,000 throughout group phases.

Premier League finish bonuses reward top-four placements with £400,000-800,000, recognizing Champions League qualification importance. 

Goal bonuses compensate attacking players £50,000-120,000 per season based on 12-18 goal targets, while assist bonuses reward creative players £40,000-100,000 for double-digit creation metrics. 

North London derby victory bonuses pay £75,000-150,000 per player for defeating Arsenal, recognizing the fixture’s cultural significance.

FAQs

Who is Tottenham’s highest-paid player?

Xavi Simons and Cristian Romero jointly lead Tottenham wages at £200,000 weekly (£10.4 million annually). Simons’ contract extends through 2030 following his loan from PSG, while Romero’s deal runs until 2029 after his permanent transfer from Atalanta.

What is Tottenham’s total wage bill for 2025/26?

Tottenham’s wage bill totals £127.6 million, ranking 6th in the Premier League. Their £87,500 average weekly salary demonstrates competitive spending for Champions League qualification ambitions.

How does Tottenham’s spending compare to Arsenal?

Tottenham’s £127.6 million wage bill sits approximately £81 million below Arsenal’s £209 million estimated expenditure. The spending gap reflects Arsenal’s title challenge requirements versus Tottenham’s top-four focus.

Which Tottenham players command the longest contracts?

Xavi Simons, Mohammed Kudus, and multiple youth prospects hold contracts extending through 2030-2031, providing long-term squad stability. Dominic Solanke’s deal through 2030 secured after his £64.3 million club-record transfer from Bournemouth.

Why did Tottenham invest heavily in midfielders?

Tottenham’s £45.8 million midfield allocation supports Postecoglou’s possession-based system requiring technical quality, pressing intensity, and creative playmaking. Simons, Maddison, and Palhinha provide diverse skill sets enabling tactical flexibility across competitions.

M. Abdullah
M. Abdullah is a professional football writer known for his expert player analyses, transfer insights, and in-depth coverage of the global game. His work delivers clear, reliable, and engaging football content for fans worldwide.