A list detailing the highest paid player in the Premier League every year since its inception has revealed the jaw-dropping rise in player salaries in just 31 years.
Inaugurated ahead of the 1992-93 season, the revamped English top-flight competition quickly became a byword for a staggering injection of money and glamour into domestic football.
Fuelled by a bumper broadcasting deal with Sky, cash flowed into the game and player wages became an increasingly lucrative way to hold on to clubs' brightest talents.
Over 30 years later, the Premier League's latest broadcasting deal, which will run from 2025 to 2029, is worth a whopping £6.7 billion - and salaries have inflated to match.
2023-24's highest earner is Manchester City's Erling Haaland, whose mammoth salary comes in at an astonishing £865,000-a-week when bonuses are accounted for. The Norwegian scoring sensation easily dominated the previous year too - following on from when Cristiano Ronaldo's £480,000-a-week at United topped the standings.
Erling His the highest-earner in the Premier League for the second season in a row
But his salary dwarfs that earnt by the competition's first chart-topper, John Barnes (left)
The highest-earning footballer internationally is Cristiano Ronaldo, currently at Al-Nassr
The eye-watering wages show how salaries in the Premier League have skyrocketed since its inception in 1992, when John Barnes was the top earner on a modest £10,000 a week.
The Liverpool icon was richly rewarded for his contributions in the first season of the Premier League, and its second, with his salary - working out at £520,000 per year - the highest in the division.
But he was knocked off the top spot by Manchester United's star forward Eric Cantona for the 1994-95 season, who nearly doubled his total with his £18,000-a-week salary.
Cantona's table-topping wages would set a precedent for the red side of Manchester, whose players took home the highest salaries 12 seasons out of 32.
Their crosstown rivals Manchester City trail them as the club with the second-deepest pockets for player wages, with their players topping the charts in seven seasons.
Announcing their purchase of the club with a bang in 2008, the Abu Dhabi United Group tempted Robinho away from Real Madrid in a British record £32.5m move, they proceeded to make him the league's highest earner with a blockbuster salary of £160,000 a week during the 2008-09 season.
His high wage would be superceded the following season by another of City's eye-catching early takeover signings, Carlos Tevez, whose £250,000-a-week wages quickly dwarfed the Brazilian transplant's.
Tevez's paycheck would hold onto the top spot for four consecutive seasons, the second time that a player's salary had done so, after Roy Keane.
The Man United midfielder was given a hefty payrise after winning the Treble under Sir Alex Ferguson in 1998-99, and was paid £52,000 per week the following season.
His salary then increased to £90,000 a week for 2001-02, and was boosted to £94,000 a week a season later.
Carlos Tevez was tempted across town by the lure of impressive wages at Manchester City
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Tevez would later be unseated by Wayne Rooney in his later years at Manchester United
Wayne Rooney held similar sway between the 2013-14 and 2016-17 seasons with his £300,000-a-week wage, only to be knocked off the top spot by future Red Devil Alexis Sanchez.
David De Gea - another Man United star - then became the top earner on £375,000-a-week, before he was dwarfed by the return to the league of Gareth Bale, who came back to Spurs on loan from Real Madrid. A large chunk of his wages were paid by the Spanish giants, but he was technically on £560,000-a-week.
Kevin De Bruyne should have been the top earner for the next two seasons judging on his base salary, but his team-mate Haaland's lucrative bonuses took him leaps and bounds above him.
The Norway international's coffers are boosted by a raft of impressive add-ons and bonuses that last season were all but guaranteed due to his blistering form.
Highest-paid Premier League stars since 1992: the list in full
1992-93: John Barnes - £10,000-a-week
1993-94: John Barnes - £10,000-a-week
1994-95: Eric Cantona - £18,000-a-week
1995-96: Dennis Bergkamp - £25,000-a-week
1996-97: Fabrizio Ravanelli - £42,000-a-week
1997-98: Alan Shearer - £34,000-a-week
1998-99: Alan Shearer - £34,000-a-week
1999-00: Roy Keane - £52,000-a-week
2000-01: Roy Keane - £52,000-a-week
2001-02: Roy Keane - £90,000-a-week
2002-03: Roy Keane - £94,000-a-week
2003-04: Hernan Crespo - £94,000-a-week
2004-05: Frank Lampard - £98,000-a-week
2005-06: Steven Gerrard - £100,000-a-week
2006-07: Andriy Shevchenko - £118,000-a-week
2007-08: John Terry - £135,000-a-week
2008-09: Robinho - £160,000-a-week
2009-10: Carlos Tevez - £250,000-a-week
2010-11: Carlos Tevez - £250,000-a-week
2011-12: Carlos Tevez - £250,000-a-week
2012-13: Carlos Tevez - £250,000-a-week
2013-14: Wayne Rooney - £300,000-a-week
2014-15: Wayne Rooney - £300,000-a-week
2015-16: Wayne Rooney - £300,000-a-week
2016-17: Wayne Rooney - £300,000-a-week
2017-18: Alexis Sanchez - £350,000-a-week
2018-19: Alexis Sanchez - £350,000-a-week
2019-20: David de Gea - £375,000-a-week
2020-21: Gareth Bale - £560,000-a-week (majority paid by Real Madrid)
2021-22: Cristiano Ronaldo - £480,000-a-week
2022-23: Erling Haaland - £865,000-a-week
2023-24: Erling Haaland - £865,000-a-week