Their 2019/20 accounts show that Bournemouth have recorded their fourth annual loss on the bounce. The headline figure is a pre-tax loss of £60.1 million — significantly worse than the £32.4 million loss after tax the club recorded in 2018-19.
Revenue was down over a quarter. Matchday income was down 30% to just £3.5m
for the season. The small stadium means that the club is always lowest ticket revenue earner
in the Premier League.
Bournemouth generated over half a billion pounds in TV money
during their time in the Premier League.
Bournemouth’s reliance on TV rights money cannot be over-stated. In
2018-19, 88 per cent of their earnings came directly from the Premier League
and that figure stands at 85 per cent for last season’s accounts — even without
that deferred TV money from Project Restart.
In total, the club are understood to have lost approximately
£250,000 in match day, commercial and retail revenue for each of the five
Premier League home games they hosted behind closed doors.
The club’s wage-to-turnover ratio has also been very high in
recent years, rising from 53 per cent in 2017 to 75.5 per cent in 2018, 84.6
per cent in 2019, then an eye-watering 113.1 per cent last season.
After the financial year-end, Bournemouth managed to sell
£62.3 million worth of players, recording a book profit of £51 million
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