Skip to main content
Join The Club
- Join our community
17
Member Features
24/7
Access Available
5K+
Active Members
Live Q&A Sessions
Weekly interactive sessions
Member Competitions
Win exclusive prizes
Exclusive Content
Premium articles & videos
Early Access
First to see new features
Exclusive Newsletters
Football news direct to your inbox
Monthly Rewards
Surprise gifts & perks
GET CLUB ACCESS QUICK
For the quickest way to join, simply enter your email below and get access. We will send a confirmation and sign you up to our newsletter to keep you updated on all your football news.
By submitting your information, you confirm you are aged 16 or over, have read our Privacy Policy and agree to the Terms & Conditions.
FIND OUT ABOUT OUR MAGAZINE
Want to subscribe to the magazine? Click the button below to find out more information.
Find out more
Get Club Access Quick

Join The Club for quick access. Enter your email below and we'll send confirmation plus sign you up to our newsletter.

By submitting your information, you confirm you are aged 16 or over, have read our Privacy Policy and agree to the Terms & Conditions. Geographical rules apply.

Background
Welcome to the club !
Hi ,

Your membership journey starts here.

Keep exploring and earning more as a member.

MY ACCOUNT

Badge picture
Earn Your First Badge
Complete 1 quiz to unlock your first badge.
Keep Earning Badges
Explore ways to get more involved as a member.
Football Quizzes

Football Quizzes

Quick quizzes for football fans.

Play Now
Football Crosswords

Football Crosswords

Football-themed crossword challenges.

Play Now

See what you’ve unlocked.

Explore your membership benefits.

Explore
Members Exclusive
Find the subscription that suits you

Find the subscription that suits you

We’ve highlighted the subscriptions our members get the most value from.

Explore

Sign Out
FourFourTwo FourFourTwo FOOTBALL NEWS, FEATURES, QUIZZES
UK EditionUK AU EditionAustralia US EditionUS CA EditionCanada KR Edition대한민국 TR EditionTürkiye
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Soccer Cleat Buying Guides
  • Newsletter
  • News
  • Video
  • Features
  • Quizzes
  • Clubs
  • Membership
  • More
    • Interviews
    • Opinion
    • The Magazine Archive
    • Subscribe
    • How to Watch
    • About
    • Lists
FourFourTwo Magazine
FourFourTwo Magazine
Why subscribe?
  • Fascinating feature articles, covering everything from grass-roots football to the international scene
  • 'ACCESS ALL AREAS' pass to exclusive interviews with the biggest and best names in the game!
From$29.99
Subscribe now
Don't miss these
Ranked! The 50 best football teams of all time
Team Ranked! The 50 best football teams of all time
Harry Kane of FC Bayern Muenchen scores his team's second goal from the penalty spot during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Phase MD1 match between FC Bayern München and Chelsea FC at Football Arena Munich on September 17, 2025 in Munich, Germany.
Quiz Quiz! Can you name every English player to have scored five or more Champions League goals?
The Best Players In The World Right Now
Player Ranked! The 100 best players in the world, 2025
Jude Bellingham of Real Madrid poses for a photo with the UEFA Champions League Trophy following the team's victory during the UEFA Champions League 2023/24 Final match between Borussia Dortmund and Real Madrid CF at Wembley Stadium on June 01, 2024 in London, England.
Quiz Quiz! Can you sort these Champions League facts by most to least?
Quickfire Quiz
Quiz Quickfire Quiz 72: Can you answer 10 questions in 90 seconds?
Arsenal's English midfielder #07 Bukayo Saka celebrates after scoring the opening goal of the English Premier League football match between Brighton and Hove Albion and Arsenal at the American Express Community Stadium in Brighton, southern England on March 4, 2026.
Team If Arsenal win the Premier League, it will be one of the finest achievements of any team in the last decade - and Fabian Hurzeler's comments prove it
Pre-Match Poser
Quiz Pre-Match Poser no.17: Can you answer this elite-level football quiz question?
Clinton Morrison's Top Top Column
Person 'Adama Traore needs to lay off the weights' Clinton Morrison's Top Top Column
Manchester City
Competition What Manchester City's 60-point deduction would mean for the Premier League
Real Madrid trounced Manchester City 3-0
Competition What Premier League's disastrous week in Europe means for fifth Champions League place
Ben White of Arsenal celebrates scoring his team's first goal with teammates Jurrien Timber, Gabriel and Bukayo Saka during the Carabao Cup Semi Final First Leg match between Chelsea and Arsenal at Stamford Bridge on January 14, 2026 in London, England.
Team Finally the bride? Arsenal's rise from disappointment to the cusp of greatness, as told by those who were there along the way
Steven Gerrard celebrates after scoring for Liverpool against Blackburn Rovers, February 2010
Quiz Quiz! Can you name every Premier League winners' all-time XI?
Best Premier League players
Competition Ranked! The 50 best Premier League players this season
Son Heung-Min of Tottenham Hotspur celebrates scoring his sides third goal during the Premier League match between Aston Villa and Tottenham Hotspur at Villa Park on March 10, 2024 in Birmingham, England.
Quiz Quiz! Can you name every nation's top-scoring Premier League player?
Kevin De Bruyne celebrates after scoring in a 4-1 win over Tottenham in the Premier League in December 2017.
Quiz Quiz! Can you name every player to have won four or more Premier League titles?
Trending
  • 🔮 Champions League Predictor
  • 💰 Arsenal's first summer signing
  • Ronaldo
  • EPL
  • Interviews
  • Transfers
  • Messi
  1. Team

Ranked! Every Premier League club by how ‘big’ they are

Features
By Greg Lea published 26 October 2018

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

A can of worms...

A can of worms...

Assessing the size of a football club isn’t simple. You can’t get the tape measure out and determine whether your club is reasonably Jordan Pickford-sized or a whopping Real Courtois.

To determine the relative size of each current Premier League club, we’ve taken into account five varied factors. Namely: history, recent success, UK fan base, global fame and, of course, financial clout. Here goes…

Page 1 of 21
Page 1 of 21
20. Cardiff

20. Cardiff

Don’t be too gloomy, Cardiff fans: you’re definitely the biggest Welsh club in the Premier League. In truth, the Bluebirds are impressively punching above their weight just by appearing in the top tier. They had only the 14th highest attendance in the Championship last season, with empty seats notable despite their promotion push.

The history books don’t help much, either. Cardiff won the FA Cup in 1927, but 2013/14 was their first top-flight season in 51 years. That stay lasted just a single season and their visit in 2018/19 could be similarly short, despite the reported $1.3 billion wealth of owner Vincent Tan.

Page 2 of 21
Page 2 of 21
19. Huddersfield

19. Huddersfield

As Terriers fans loudly remind rival supporters, this is a club that have “won the league three times in a row”. That prestigious hat-trick came in the 1920s, however, and the reason manager David Wagner is considered a miracle-worker is because he’s taken a club who were clinging to Championship status and led them to an unlikely Premier League promotion.

On the plus side, the John Smith's Stadium is a lovely ground and Town are investing in improved training facilities. Yet Huddersfield are some way off being the biggest club in Yorkshire, let alone one of the largest in the land.

Page 3 of 21
Page 3 of 21
18. Bournemouth

18. Bournemouth

The Cherries are a strange fruit. On the one hand, their piddly 11,000-seater stadium and the fact they’d never had a sniff of top-flight football until 2015 marks them down as the league’s minniest minnow.

Yet we can’t live in the past: since achieving promotion, Bournemouth have finished an average of 12th and invested in the squad (Colombia international Jefferson Lerma set them back £25m this summer). Meanwhile, plans are ongoing for a new stadium. Bournemouth may have little historical standing, but they’re writing their own history right now.

Page 4 of 21
Page 4 of 21
17. Brighton

17. Brighton

A tricky club to place. Brighton have no glorious past, and as recently as 20 years ago they were staring into the barrel of liquidation and a place in the Conference. Promotion to the Premier League was no fluke, though, but rather a result of long-term planning and investment – particularly in a new 30,000-seater stadium.

Brighton are in just their second campaign of Premier League football and retain plucky underdog status. Yet owner Tony Bloom has spent over £100m on transfers since last summer and, with a decent catchment area for fans, the Seagulls are upwardly mobile.

Page 5 of 21
Page 5 of 21
16. Burnley

16. Burnley

Like Huddersfield, Burnley have ‘previous’, having won an FA Cup and two league titles in the past. Yet that was several generations ago and the club spent the majority of the 1980s and 1990s in the third and fourth divisions.

Sean Dyche has gradually established them as a Premier League club since his arrival in 2012; last season’s seventh-place finish may have been a dramatic overachievement, but it’s been done via prudent planning (Burnley had the Premier League’s lowest wage bill in 2016/17). They may not be a glamorous name, but the Clarets’ solid foundations put some of the go-for-broke big boys in the Championship to shame.

Page 6 of 21
Page 6 of 21
15. Fulham

15. Fulham

No disrespect but Fulham feel like a small club. The homely, picturesque Craven Cottage stands in contrast to the shiny super-stadiums built by London neighbours Arsenal and (presumably one day) Tottenham.

Yet this sleepy club has grown in stature, sparked by Mohamed Al-Fayed’s purchase in the 1990s. Since 2001, Fulham have spent 14 out of 18 seasons in the Premier League and reached a UEFA Cup final. This summer the Cottagers, now owned by billionaire Shahid Khan, spent £25m on Jean Michael Seri – an ex-Barcelona target. Not so snoozy now.

Page 7 of 21
Page 7 of 21
14. Watford

14. Watford

Lower-league tiddlers until the 1980s, when the dream duo of Graham Taylor and Elton John rocketed Watford up the divisions to the highs of an FA Cup final and runners-up spot in the league. They've yo-yoed a bit since, but Pozzo family investment has helped Watford cement their place in England’s elite.

Watford are now viewed as a destination club for promising players, albeit ones who may then head to bigger things (see: Richarlison). They’ve gradually expanded Vicarage Road, and their yellow-and-black kit is increasingly becoming part of the Premier League furniture.

Page 8 of 21
Page 8 of 21
13. Wolves

13. Wolves

Only Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester United have accumulated more points in English football than Wolves, who were founded way back in 1877. Yet whereas those three giants have collected most of theirs in the top flight, Wolves’ have been spread across the divisions.

They were England’s dominant team in the 1950s, though, and they’re on the rise again thanks to their strong ties with Jorge Mendes. Now a destination club for prime European talent, Wolves look like a good bet for a top-seven finish this term.

Page 9 of 21
Page 9 of 21
12. Crystal Palace

12. Crystal Palace

Palace’s trophy cabinet is bare save for the 1991 Zenith Data Systems Cup, but the Eagles feel like a growing, modern club. They’ve been in the Premier League for six seasons in a row – their longest ever stay in the top flight – and you only need to look at their playing staff to see that this is a stronger club than it first appears.

How many other clubs could have held onto Wilfried Zaha (the best player outside of the league’s top six) this summer? And while Christian Benteke has struggled, the fact that Palace can buy a Belgian international striker for £32m gives a hint of their financial muscle. A packed Selhurst Park also offers the best atmosphere of London’s larger sides.

Page 10 of 21
Page 10 of 21
11. Southampton

11. Southampton

Southampton may have fallen into League One in 2009, but they’re a staple Premier League side. Since the top tier was rebranded in 1992, Saints have been participants in 20 of a possible 27 seasons.

The south coast club battled against relegation last term, but their average final position since promotion in 2012 is 10th. Southampton's academy is among the most productive in the land, and St Mary’s one of the Premier League’s 10 biggest stadiums with a capacity of 32,505.

Page 11 of 21
Page 11 of 21
10. Leicester

10. Leicester

Leicester’s extraordinary title success in 2015/16 and run to the last eight of the Champions League the following season has certainly boosted their profile around the globe. Despite having spent 11 of the last 17 seasons outside the top division, the Foxes are a household Premier League name.

It’s not all about Claudio Ranieri and 2016, though. This is a club that's won three League Cups and reached four FA Cup finals, while their impressive 32,315-seater stadium is one of the best new-builds in the land.

Page 12 of 21
Page 12 of 21
9. West Ham

9. West Ham

West Ham fans, with tongue partially in cheek, like to claim they won the World Cup in 1966, but this is a club that has never scooped the top-flight title. Yet the Hammers have always had a reputation grander than their trophy haul (three FA Cups and 1965’s European Cup Winners’ Cup), and they’re undeniably one of the most high-profile outfits in England.

Their academy has produced numerous England internationals down the years, including many of those involved in the Three Lions’ greatest moment 52 years ago, and despite many supporters’ dislike for the London Stadium, it’s still the fourth largest in the country.

Page 13 of 21
Page 13 of 21
8. Newcastle

8. Newcastle

Newcastle haven’t won a major honour since 1955 and they’ve suffered relegation to the Championship twice in the last decade. Yet they remain one of the biggest clubs in England, thanks largely to a loud, loyal fan base which regularly packs out the 52,000-capacity St James’ Park.

Their trophy cabinet isn’t completely empty either, with the Magpies lifting the FA Cup six times and winning the First Division on four occasions. They finished as runners-up in the Premier League twice in the 1990s, meanwhile, and have competed in the Champions League this century.

Page 14 of 21
Page 14 of 21
7. Everton

7. Everton

Everton have competed in the top flight for every season since 1954, and they’ve been crowned champions of it on nine occasions. When Greg Dyke set out to form the breakaway Premier League in 1990, he met with representatives of ‘the big five’, knowing that if he had England’s giants on board, the rest would follow.

Everton were a member of that exclusive group, alongside Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester United and Tottenham. It’s understandable why Evertonians would dispute being ‘only’ England’s seventh-biggest club now, but their last major trophy was the 1995 FA Cup and they haven’t established themselves as a modern European power despite their rich history.

Page 15 of 21
Page 15 of 21
6. Tottenham

6. Tottenham

To put a negative spin on things, Tottenham haven’t won the league since 1961 or any sort of trophy for over a decade. They’re well-supported, yes, and have a reputation for playing exciting football, but the lack of silverware counts for something.

Yet it’s important to acknowledge that Spurs have made great strides in recent years, building an excellent academy, investing in training facilities and building a 62,000-capacity stadium which will supposedly open this season. This is also their third consecutive campaign in the Champions League, which is further evidence of a club going places.

Page 16 of 21
Page 16 of 21
5. Manchester City

5. Manchester City

Reigning Premier League champions they may be, but even the most ardent of City supporters would struggle to argue that they’re the biggest club in the division. Indeed, they may currently have the best team in the top flight, but this is a side that hadn’t won the title in 44 years before Sheikh Mansour bankrolled their 2012 triumph.

City were a successful club in the late 1960s and early 1970s, though, and their support remained strong even when they dropped into the third flight in the late 1990s. Compared to the top four in this list, however, their fan base – both in the UK and globally – lags behind.

Page 17 of 21
Page 17 of 21
4. Chelsea

4. Chelsea

Roman Abramovich’s takeover in 2003 undoubtedly changed the course of Chelsea’s history. Since the Russian ploughed his roubles into the west London outfit, the Blues have won five Premier League titles, five FA Cups and the Champions League – becoming the first London club to win Europe’s foremost competition.

Their global following is strong, particularly in Africa thanks to the exploits of Didier Drogba, Michael Essien and John Obi Mikel at Stamford Bridge. Expanding said stadium to increase its current capacity of 41,837 should be Chelsea’s next step.

Page 18 of 21
Page 18 of 21
3. Arsenal

3. Arsenal

Arsenal may not have won the title since 2004 – Chelsea, by contrast, have claimed the biggest domestic prize five times since then – but they’re still the capital’s largest club. Thirteen league championships and a record 13 FA Cups see to that, while a decline in the latter years of Arsene Wenger’s reign didn’t seem to affect their popularity both in the UK and overseas.

The Emirates Stadium may not be home to Europe’s most ferocious atmosphere, but it’s a superb arena which has further increased Arsenal’s standing. The January signing of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang also proved that the Gunners can still attract top players even without Champions League football.

Page 19 of 21
Page 19 of 21
2. Liverpool

2. Liverpool

As the Anfield banners crow: European royalty. Five times champions of Europe – oh, and three UEFA Cup trophies down the back of the sofa, if you care to look. Plus just the 18 league championships.

It says something about Liverpool that, despite the last of those titles coming back in 1990, their status as a whopper of a club is rarely questioned. That’s thanks to a support that’s as widespread as it is impassioned. Liverpool have suffered indignities in the last 28 years: bad managerial appointments, poor ownership and top players flying the Kop, but the fervour among believers has rarely dimmed.

Page 20 of 21
Page 20 of 21
1. Manchester United

1. Manchester United

Manchester United’s status as England’s grandest name was forged by Matt Busby, who made United European pioneers, survived the Munich air disaster (even if many of his players tragically didn’t), then helped his side become England’s first European Cup winners in 1968.

The club floundered in the 1970s and ’80s, yet even then when Liverpool were racking up honours, you could still make an argument that United had the aura of England’s most famous club. Then Alex Ferguson arrived and went on to end almost all arguments by making United England’s most successful modern-day club, as well as its biggest draw. Even in their post-Fergie strife, they’re the biggest news story in town.

Page 21 of 21
Page 21 of 21
TOPICS
Premier League Arsenal Tottenham Hotspur Chelsea Everton Liverpool Manchester United Leicester City Crystal Palace Fulham Southampton Brighton and Hove Albion Newcastle United Watford West Ham United Cardiff City Burnley Huddersfield Town Wolverhampton Wanderers Manchester City
Greg Lea
Greg Lea
Social Links Navigation

Greg Lea is a freelance football journalist who's filled in wherever FourFourTwo needs him since 2014. He became a Crystal Palace fan after watching a 1-0 loss to Port Vale in 1998, and once got on the scoresheet in a primary school game against Wilfried Zaha's Whitehorse Manor (an own goal in an 8-0 defeat).

Read more
West Ham fans have made their feelings about the club board clear
New league table reveals West Ham and Tottenham disconnect and why they disappoint their fans most
 
 
Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy
Tottenham Hotspur crowned most profitable club as every Premier League team's finances revealed
 
 
Best Premier League players
Ranked! The 50 best Premier League players this season
 
 
Manchester City have been a dominant force in English football over the past ten years
Quiz! Can you name every club to have won a league title, FA Cup or League Cup?
 
 
James Milner with Brighton
RANKED! The Premier League's top ten appearance makers
 
 
MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 24: Idrissa Gueye of Everton clashes with teammate Michael Keane resulting in a red card for Gueye during the Premier League match between Manchester United and Everton at Old Trafford on November 24, 2025 in Manchester, England. (Photo by Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Offside via Getty Images)
Everton and Manchester United matches are the Premier League distilled
 
 
Latest in Team
Palermo walk out onto the pitch at Stadio Renzo Barbera
FourFourTwo 'On The Ground': Palermo FC access-all-areas
 
 
Igor Tudor, Interim Manager of Tottenham Hotspur, looks dejected after Julian Alvarez of Atletico de Madrid (not pictured) scores his team's fifth goal during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 Round of 16 First Leg match between Atletico de Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur FC at Estadio Civitas Metropolitano on March 10, 2026 in Madrid, Spain.
Cult Tottenham hero launches into X-rated Igor Tudor rant amid desperate plea
 
 
NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, ENGLAND - MARCH 09: The Newcastle United Press Conference at St.James’ Park on March 09, 2026 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. (Photo by Serena Taylor/Newcastle United via Getty Images)
Newcastle star Lewis Hall excels on England World Cup audition
 
 
Aston Villa defender Ezri Konsa, May 2025
Aston Villa are now relying on Unai Emery's specialist skill to save their season: success in the Europa League
 
 
GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - MARCH 08: Police line up to block fans from storming the pitch during a Scottish Gas Scottish Cup Quarter-Final match between Rangers and Celtic at Ibrox Stadium, on March 08, 2026, in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Craig Williamson/SNS Group via Getty Images)
Gordon Strachan proposes lasting supporter ban at Old Firm derby
 
 
Adidas released retro USA 1994 denim shirt
Adidas re-launches classic 1990s United States retro denim kit
 
 
Latest in Features
Real Madrid trounced Manchester City 3-0
What Premier League's disastrous week in Europe means for fifth Champions League place
 
 
Football Manager 26 players to avoid
Football Manager 26: The 10 players you MUST avoid in the game
 
 
Arsenal striker Gabriel Jesus
How to watch Arsenal vs Everton: Free streams & TV details for second teatime Premier League kick-off on Saturday
 
 
Chelsea and Newcastle played out a 2-2 draw at St James' Park earlier this season
How to watch Chelsea vs Newcastle: Live streams & TV details as both sides return to action after Champions League endeavours
 
 
Sunderland winger Nilson Angulo
Can I watch Sunderland vs Brighton? TV info and live stream details for 3pm Premier League kick-off
 
 
Manchester United host Aston Villa this weekend at Old Trafford and tickets are still available
See a Premier League game this weekend! Secure your seat now with last-minute deals still available
 
 
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. Erling Haaland of Manchester City looks dejected after Morgan Gibbs-White of Nottingham Forest (not pictured) scores his team's first goal during the Premier League match between Manchester City and Nottingham Forest at Etihad Stadium on March 04, 2026 in Manchester, England.
    1
    How to watch West Ham vs Manchester City: free streams & TV details as Premier League title hopefuls chase three points in London
  2. 2
    ‘Diego Simeone is almost a god at Atleti, but he’s earned that status. He has changed the club’s history’ Saul Niguez on what Simeone means to Atletico Madrid fans
  3. 3
    How to watch Arsenal vs Everton: Free streams & TV details for second teatime Premier League kick-off on Saturday
  4. 4
    How to watch Chelsea vs Newcastle: Live streams & TV details as both sides return to action after Champions League endeavours
  5. 5
    ‘That goal against England was incredible – one of the most important moments of my career so far’ Nico Williams on his Euro 2024 final strike

FourFourTwo is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google
  • Terms and conditions
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Accessibility statement
  • Careers
  • About FourFourTwo
  • Advertise with us
  • Worldwide
  • How to pitch to FourFourTwo

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...