
Cristiano Ronaldo earns approximately $215 million per year at Al Nassr in 2026 — making him the highest-paid footballer and one of the highest-paid athletes in the world. That works out to roughly $640,000 per day, $26,700 per hour, $444 per minute, and $7.40 per second — around the clock, every day of the year, whether he is playing, sleeping, or on holiday. All earnings are 100% tax-free in Saudi Arabia.
Salary Breakdown at a Glance
| Time Period | Earnings |
|---|---|
| Per second | $7.40 |
| Per minute | $444 |
| Per hour | $26,700 |
| Per day | $640,000 |
| Per week | $4,500,000 |
| Per month | $18,000,000 |
| Per year (base) | $215,000,000 |
| Per year (with bonuses) | Up to $260,000,000+ |
Source note: Figures are based on Ronaldo’s 2025–2027 Al Nassr contract as reported by Marca, Capology, and beIN Sports (April 2026). Most sources quote the base salary at approximately €200M–€208M (~$215M–$242M depending on EUR/USD rate). We use the most widely cited figure of $215M for consistency. All earnings are tax-free in Saudi Arabia.
Contents
Current Al Nassr Contract (2025–2027)
Cristiano Ronaldo has been playing for Saudi Pro League club Al Nassr since January 2023, and in June 2025 he signed a landmark two-year contract extension that runs through June 2027.
According to Marca, Ronaldo earns around $235 million per season (€200 million), which translates to more than $19 million per month, making him the highest-paid footballer in the world.
The two-year extension is worth approximately £492 million (about $620 million) and includes an unprecedented combination of salary, bonuses, commercial income, and lifestyle perks.
According to Capology, which tracks verified football salary data, Ronaldo’s estimated gross fixed salary is €208,400,000 for the 2025–2026 season — approximately €4,007,692 per week, excluding bonuses.
This makes him not just the highest-paid footballer on the planet, but one of the highest-paid individual athletes in any sport — ahead of NFL quarterbacks, NBA stars, and Formula 1 drivers when annual base salary alone is compared.
Salary Per Day, Hour, Minute, Second
Let’s put Ronaldo’s salary in perspective with some fun comparisons.
The raw numbers
Based on a $215 million annual salary and a 365-day year:
| Timeframe | Ronaldo Earns |
|---|---|
| 1 second | $7.40 |
| 1 minute | $444 |
| 1 hour | $26,700 |
| 8-hour working day | $213,600 |
| Full 24-hour day | $640,000 |
| Weekend (48 hours) | $1,280,000 |
| One week | $4,500,000 |
| One month | $18,000,000 |
| One year | $215,000,000 |
What happens in the time it takes you to read this?
If this article takes you 8 minutes to read, Ronaldo will have earned $3,552 by the time you finish. That’s more than the average monthly salary in Portugal — his home country — earned in a single article read.
During a 90-minute football match
Over the course of a standard 90-minute Al Nassr match, Ronaldo earns approximately $2,403,000 from his salary alone — before a single endorsement post or business revenue is counted.
How the Contract Is Structured
Ronaldo’s Al Nassr deal is not a simple wage — it is one of the most complex and creative athlete contracts ever structured. Understanding its components helps explain why different sources quote different figures.
The contract includes an unprecedented combination of salary, bonuses, commercial income, and lifestyle perks — including a 15% equity stake in Al Nassr.
Contract components
| Component | Details |
|---|---|
| Base salary | ~$215M–$242M per year |
| Performance bonuses | Up to $81M over the two-year term |
| Signing bonus | $33M–$51M (one-time) |
| Club equity stake | 15% of Al Nassr (valued ~$45M) |
| Private jet access | ~$5M annual value |
| Housing and family benefits | Provided by club |
| Total contract value | ~$620M over two years |
The 15% equity stake is particularly significant. It means Ronaldo is not just an employee of Al Nassr — he is a part-owner. As the club grows in value (which is expected given Saudi Arabia’s aggressive investment in football infrastructure ahead of the 2034 World Cup), the value of that stake rises with it.
His base salary with his Al Nassr 2025–26 contract is around €200 million (net/tax free). He can also earn another €40 million in individual and team-related bonuses.
Why do sources quote different numbers?
You may have seen figures ranging from $200M to $242M per year for Ronaldo’s salary. Here is why they differ:
- Capology tracks the base gross salary only: ~€208M (~$225M)
- Marca quotes the total package including some commercial elements: ~$235M
- CelebrityNetWorth includes all components (base + bonuses + perks): $242M
- Marca (Bombardir reference) quotes base only in USD: $215M
For practical purposes, $215M–$235M per year is the most defensible range for his Al Nassr salary. The $242M figure represents the maximum when all bonuses and perks are included.
The Tax-Free Advantage
One of the most under-reported aspects of Ronaldo’s Saudi Arabia deal is the tax situation — and it dramatically changes the picture.
Saudi Arabia charges zero income tax. There is no personal income tax for individuals, foreign or domestic.
By contrast, Ronaldo’s previous clubs were based in some of Europe’s highest-tax jurisdictions:
| Club | Country | Peak Income Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Juventus | Italy | 43% |
| Real Madrid | Spain | 45–47% |
| Manchester United | England | 45% |
| Al Nassr | Saudi Arabia | 0% |
This means that if Ronaldo were earning €200M per year in Spain, he would take home approximately €106M after tax. In Saudi Arabia, he keeps the full €200M.
On a like-for-like basis, his Al Nassr package is roughly equivalent to earning ~€370M per year in Spain after tax — a staggering effective advantage.
This is not lost on Ronaldo himself. He has spoken openly in interviews about the financial security Saudi Arabia provides, and the decision to stay through 2027 rather than pursue a lower-paying return to European football makes complete financial sense.
Ronaldo’s Salary History: Club by Club
To appreciate how far Ronaldo’s earnings have come, here is his salary across every club in his career.
Career salary timeline
According to AiScore’s career salary tracker: 2025–26 season at Al Nassr: £3.4M per week (£179.8M/year); 2024–25 at Al Nassr: £3.3M/week (£172.6M/year); 2023–24 at Al Nassr: £3.3M/week (£172.6M/year); 2022–23 at Manchester United: £515,000/week (£26.7M/year); 2021–22 at Manchester United: £515,000/week (£26.7M/year); 2019–20 at Juventus: £953,013/week (£49.5M/year).
| Season | Club | Annual Salary |
|---|---|---|
| 2003–2005 | Manchester United (early) | ~£1.82M |
| 2007–2009 | Manchester United (peak) | ~£5M |
| 2009–2015 | Real Madrid (early) | ~£24–28M |
| 2015–2018 | Real Madrid (peak) | ~£29–30M |
| 2018–2021 | Juventus | ~£49.5M |
| 2021–2022 | Manchester United (return) | ~£26.7M |
| 2022–2023 | Al Nassr (initial) | ~£173M |
| 2023–2025 | Al Nassr (extended) | ~£172.6M |
| 2025–2026 | Al Nassr (new contract) | ~£179.8M |
The jump from his final Manchester United salary (~£26.7M) to Al Nassr (~£173M) represents a more than 6x increase in a single transfer. No other athlete in any sport has experienced a comparable salary step-change in their career.
At Real Madrid, his earnings peaked at around $100 million per year after Champions League wins. His Juventus spell added approximately $57 million per year in base salary, totaling $170–200 million over three years. At Manchester United (return), base figures reached $35–40 million.
Career salary totals (estimated)
| Club Era | Estimated Career Earnings |
|---|---|
| Manchester United (2003–09) | ~$30M |
| Real Madrid (2009–18) | ~$450M |
| Juventus (2018–21) | ~$170M |
| Manchester United (2021–22) | ~$40M |
| Al Nassr (2023–present) | ~$650M+ (and counting) |
| Career total (salary only) | ~$1.3B+ |
Ronaldo became the first active footballer to cross $1 billion in total net worth with his lucrative contracts at Al Nassr.
Endorsement Income on Top
Ronaldo’s Al Nassr salary is remarkable — but it is only part of his total earnings picture. His endorsement and business income adds significantly to the headline figure.
Annual income breakdown (all sources)
| Source | Estimated Annual Income |
|---|---|
| Al Nassr base salary | $215M |
| Performance bonuses | Up to $40M |
| Nike lifetime deal (annual component) | $18M–$30M |
| Other brand partnerships | $30M–$120M |
| Instagram sponsored posts | $50M–$100M |
| YouTube channel (UR·Cristiano) | ~$10M |
| CR7 business ventures | $20M+ |
| Total annual earnings | ~$275M–$515M |
This means that even while sleeping, Ronaldo’s combined income streams generate approximately:
- $750 per minute (minimum estimate)
- $1,400 per minute (maximum estimate including peak endorsement activity)
How Ronaldo Compares to Other Top Athletes
To put Ronaldo’s salary in context, here is how he stacks up against other top earners in global sport.
Highest-paid athletes in the world (2025–26, approximate)
| Athlete | Sport | Annual Earnings |
|---|---|---|
| Cristiano Ronaldo | Football | $215M–$260M |
| Lionel Messi | Football | ~$135M |
| LeBron James | Basketball | ~$128M |
| Kylian Mbappé | Football | ~$110M |
| Canelo Álvarez | Boxing | ~$110M |
| Steph Curry | Basketball | ~$92M |
| Roger Federer | Tennis (retired) | ~$90M (endorsements) |
Ronaldo earns more from his salary alone than most top athletes make from salary and endorsements combined. Only when comparing total earnings packages — including LeBron James’s massive Nike royalties — does the gap narrow meaningfully.
Compared to regular workers
For perspective, here is what Ronaldo earns in the time it takes the average person to do common tasks:
| Activity | Time | Ronaldo Earns |
|---|---|---|
| Brew a cup of tea | 3 minutes | $1,332 |
| Watch a TV episode | 30 minutes | $13,350 |
| Sleep 8 hours | 8 hours | $213,600 |
| Work a full week | 40 hours | $1,068,000 |
| Take a one-week holiday | 7 days | $4,480,000 |
What $215M Per Year Actually Buys
To make the number tangible: Ronaldo’s annual Al Nassr salary could fund:
- The entire annual payroll of a Premier League mid-table club
- A fleet of 43 Bugatti Chirons (at $5M each)
- 430 average UK homes (at £500,000 each)
- Annual salaries for 4,300 NHS nurses (at £50,000 each)
- The GDP of a small island nation
Or put differently: Ronaldo earns more in a single day ($640,000) than the average Portuguese worker earns in approximately 15 years.
FAQs
How much does Cristiano Ronaldo earn per day in 2026?
Ronaldo earns approximately $640,000 per day from his Al Nassr salary alone. When endorsements and business income are factored in, his total daily earnings can exceed $750,000 on an average day — and significantly more on days when sponsored posts go live.
How much does Ronaldo earn per second?
Based on his $215M annual Al Nassr base salary, Ronaldo earns approximately $7.40 per second — every second of every day, whether he is playing, training, or asleep.
What is Ronaldo’s salary at Al Nassr in 2026?
Ronaldo’s base salary at Al Nassr for the 2025–26 season is approximately €208M (around $215M–$235M), according to Capology and Marca. With performance bonuses and commercial components, the total annual package can reach $242M–$260M.
Is Ronaldo’s salary at Al Nassr tax-free?
Yes. Saudi Arabia does not levy personal income tax. Ronaldo keeps 100% of his salary — unlike his previous clubs in Spain, Italy, and England, where he would have paid 43–47% in income tax. The tax-free status makes the effective value of his deal significantly higher than the headline figure.
How much did Ronaldo earn at Real Madrid?
Ronaldo’s Real Madrid salary peaked at approximately €30M per year (around $30–35M at the time) in the final years of his contract, with additional Champions League bonuses. His total earnings at Real Madrid over nine seasons, including endorsements, are estimated at $450M+.
How much did Ronaldo earn at Juventus?
At Juventus, Ronaldo earned approximately £49.5M per year (around $57M at 2018–21 exchange rates). Over his three seasons in Turin, his base salary totalled around £148M (~$170M).
How does Ronaldo’s salary compare to Messi’s?
Ronaldo’s Al Nassr salary of $215M+ per year is significantly higher than Messi’s estimated $135M annual package at Inter Miami. The gap is partly explained by the Saudi league’s oil-backed wealth and the tax-free advantage. Messi’s earnings in the US are subject to federal and Florida state tax.
When does Ronaldo’s Al Nassr contract expire?
Ronaldo’s current contract runs until June 2027. He signed a two-year extension in June 2025. At 42 years old by the time the contract expires, decisions about his future — retirement, a final club move, or another extension — are expected to be major football news in 2027.
Has Ronaldo ever taken a salary cut?
Yes — twice. He took a pay cut to return to Manchester United in 2021 (from ~£49.5M at Juventus to ~£26.7M at United). He also accepted reduced image rights to push through his original Real Madrid signing in 2009 before later renegotiating upward. His Al Nassr move reversed all of that decisively.
How much has Ronaldo earned in his entire career?
Market analysts anticipate Ronaldo’s total professional earnings will surpass $2.5 billion by 2027, factoring in all salary, endorsements, and business income since he turned professional in 2002.
