Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Saudi Arabia Puts Big Four Clubs On Sale, Courts Brazilian Market


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Saudi Arabia has started opening its football clubs to outside investors, a sharp break from years of total state control. The Ministry of Sport confirmed the first privatizations in 2025, naming Al-Zulfi, Al-Kholood, and Al-Ansar.

At the same time, the country is weighing how far to extend sales to its four giants: Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad, Al-Hilal, and Al-Ahli. Today, those“Big Four” remain 75% owned by the Public Investment Fund (PIF), with each club's non-profit foundation holding the other 25%.

This structure secures government backing while testing what private money can bring. Officials present the move as part of a long-term plan to make the Saudi Pro League financially self-sustaining.

The timing links directly to the 2034 FIFA World Cup, which Saudi Arabia will host. FIFA 's selection puts a fixed deadline on stadium, transport, and digital investments.

The state's“Vision 2030” strategy aims to diversify the economy away from oil, and football now sits at the center of that drive.



The league has already introduced hard limits: 25-man squads and ten foreign registrations, including two under-21 players, plus match-day restrictions.

These rules seek to balance expensive signings with youth development and to keep costs from spiraling. Saudi clubs continue to buy top names.

The league confirmed João Félix, Kingsley Coman, and Iñigo Martínez all joined Al-Nassr in 2025. Their arrivals follow Cristiano Ronaldo's record-breaking contract and underscore the buying power Saudi clubs still deploy.

Brazil has become a focus market. The Saudi Pro League runs Portuguese-language channels and signed rights with Band, GOAT, and SporTV (Globo).

Officials say audiences in Brazil now match Saudi domestic levels during peak matches. With 26 Brazilian players in the league and new Portuguese-language outreach, Saudi football wants to lock in South American attention.

Behind the figures, the story is about control and credibility. Privatization allows new investors to enter, but the state keeps the largest brands in its grip through the PIF.

Roster rules create financial discipline, and broadcasting deals with IMG and Brazilian partners widen reach. The 2034 World Cup adds pressure to deliver.

For investors, the attraction is access to a government-backed league that blends state support with gradual opening. For Brazil and other markets, the message is clear: Saudi football is not just buying stars, it is selling itself as a global product.

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