The Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) has not yet published the prize amounts for the Brasileirão 2025. However, it is certain that 30% of each club’s total prize pool will be linked to their final position in the classification.
In 2024, champion Botafogo received R$48.1 million from the CBF for his position. This year, the Flamengo champion’s prize should be bigger, exceeding R$50 million.
The values are scaled according to the final position in the classification. The four relegated clubs do not receive prizes for position.
Brasileirão 2025 awards by position
Values from 2024 used in positions from 2025. The tendency is for payments to be higher.
- 1º – Flemish: R$48.1 million
- 2º – Palm trees: R$45.7 million
- 3º – Cruise: R$43.3 million
- 4º – Mirassol: R$40.9 million
- 5º – Fluminense: R$38.5 million
- 6º – Botafogo: R$36.1 million
- 7º – Bahia: R$33.7 million
- 8º – São Paulo: R$31.3 million
- 9º – Grêmio: R$ 28.8 million
- 10º – Red Bull Bragantino: R$ 26.4 million
- 11º – Atlético-MG: R$ 20.7 million
- 12º – Santos: R$ 19.2 million
- 13º – Corinthians: R$ 17.8 million
- 14º – Vasco: R$ 17.3 million
- 15º – Victory: R$ 16.8 million
- 16º – International: R$ 16.3 million
- 17º – Ceará: R$ 0 (demoted – no prize awarded)
- 18º – Fortaleza: R$ 0 (demoted – no prize awarded)
- 19º – Youth: R$ 0 (demoted – no prize awarded)
- 20º – Sport: R$ 0 (demoted – no prize awarded)
Brasileirão 2025: how the prize division works
The Brasileirão 2025 marked an important change in the way revenues are divided between Series A teams. However, as with the amounts for positions, it is not possible to make an exact estimate of the total prize amounts.
Until 2024, all payment for performance came from Globo, which centralized negotiations and distributed the amounts according to three criteria: fixed quota, position in the table and audience. From this year onwards, however, this process will be divided between two commercial blocks – Libra e LFU – who negotiate their TV rights separately.
This change means that the prize calculation varies depending on each club’s block.
What it was like until 2024
The distribution worked like this:
- 40% divided equally between clubs
- 30% according to the final classification
- 30% according to the audience
What changed in 2025
With Libra and LFU taking over the distribution, the model becomes different in each block:
LFU
- 45% divided equally
- 30% per performance
- 25% per audience
Libra
- 40% equally
- 30% per performance
- 30% per audience
The sum of the two blocks should generate approximately R$2.9 billion in TV rights. Furthermore, the final value for each team also depends on factors such as pay-per-view, audience and transfers provided for in the contract.
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