Jérémy Jacquet to Liverpool: what the £53.4m move does to their squad-cost room

Jérémy Jacquet's £53.4m move to Liverpool adds an estimated £14m a year in amortisation plus around £11.4m in wages — roughly £25.4m a year of extra squad cost, worth about 3 percentage points on the club's squad-cost ratio. PSRwatch currently forecasts Liverpool at 75.6% against the 85% levy line.
As recorded by Transfermarkt; clubs have not confirmed the structure.
Fee plus capitalised costs spread over an assumed 4-year contract (PSRwatch estimate).
Amortisation plus estimated wages (PSRwatch model).
Estimated room after this window's completed moves.
Quick summary
Liverpool have signed Jérémy Jacquet from Stade Rennais FC for a reported £53.4m, one of the biggest fees of the 2026/27 summer window. Jérémy Jacquet's £53.4m move to Liverpool adds an estimated £14m a year in amortisation plus around £11.4m in wages — roughly £25.4m a year of extra squad cost, worth about 3 percentage points on the club's squad-cost ratio. PSRwatch currently forecasts Liverpool at 75.6% against the 85% levy line.
Confirmed, reported or scenario?
This move is recorded as completed by Transfermarkt, with a reported fee of £53.4m. That makes it a real, completed transfer rather than a rumour or a PSRwatch scenario — but the fee itself is a reported figure, not a club-confirmed one, and clubs rarely publish exact structures. Add-ons, sell-on clauses and payment schedules can all shift the true accounting picture, so treat every financial figure below as an estimate built on that reported fee.
The PSRwatch financial estimate
PSRwatch models this deal on an assumed 4-year contract with estimated wages of £11.4m a year (wage confidence: modelled). On those assumptions the signing adds £14m a year in transfer-fee amortisation and £25.4m a year in total squad cost, moving Liverpool's squad-cost ratio by an estimated 3 percentage points. These are the same numbers shown on the Liverpool club page, so the article and the site always agree.
Annual squad-cost impact
The arithmetic is straightforward. £53.4m spread over an assumed 4-year contract is about £13.4m a year. PSRwatch also capitalises estimated agent and signing costs into the fee, which takes the modelled annual amortisation to £14m. Estimated wages of £11.4m a year then go on top:
- Annual amortisation (fee plus capitalised costs, spread over the contract): £14m
- Estimated annual wages: £11.4m
- Estimated annual squad-cost change: £25.4m
Set against Liverpool's football income base of £848m, that is roughly 3 percentage points on the squad-cost ratio — every season of the contract, not just this one.
What it means for Liverpool's room
PSRwatch's 2026/27 forecast puts Liverpool at a squad-cost ratio of 75.6%, which leaves an estimated £79.8m of room before the 85% line where the Premier League levy starts. The club is still an estimated £334m short of the 115% red zone where points deductions begin, and its PSRwatch status is "Safe".
Liverpool's modelled squad cost for 2026/27 is £641m against a football income base of £848m. That is built from an estimated £480m in player wages, £136m in annual transfer-fee cost and £24.6m in agent, signing, loan and bonus costs. On PSRwatch's numbers that is the 14th-highest squad-cost ratio of the 20 clubs in the 2026/27 forecast.
Because the modelled ratio is below 85%, no levy applies on PSRwatch's current numbers. The club could add roughly £79.8m of annual squad cost before reaching the levy line — equivalent to about £399m of transfer fees spread over five-year contracts, before wages.
This window's completed business has added an estimated 1.6 percentage points to Liverpool's ratio so far, so each further deal now moves the club closer to the thresholds than it would have at the start of the summer.
What we don't know
- The reported £53.4m fee has not been broken down by either club, so any add-ons, bonuses or sell-on clauses are invisible to outside models.
- The exact contract length has not been officially confirmed; PSRwatch assumes 4 years for amortisation purposes.
- Wages of £11.4m a year are a PSRwatch model output, not a reported figure — real wages, bonuses and image-rights arrangements could be materially different.
- Agent fees and signing costs are estimated, and the true accounting treatment depends on details clubs do not publish.
Try it in the calculator
You can test this deal — or your own version of it with different wages, contract length or add-ons — in the PSRwatch squad-cost calculator. The link pre-fills the reported fee for Jérémy Jacquet against Liverpool's forecast position; everything else is yours to change.
What to watch next
The obvious question is whether Liverpool balance this spending with sales before the window closes. With £79.8m of estimated room left, one more signing of this size would materially change the picture, while sales would extend it. Confirmation of the contract length, any official word on the fee structure, and the club's remaining business this window are the things most likely to move these estimates.
Sources
PSRwatch figures are independent estimates built from filed accounts, provider transfer and wage data, and PSRwatch modelling. They are not official Premier League, EFL or UEFA calculations. Where a fee or wage is unconfirmed we say so, and undisclosed fees are never presented as real numbers.
Frequently asked questions
Can Liverpool afford this signing?
On PSRwatch's estimates, yes in squad-cost terms: after this window's completed moves the club still has about £79.8m of room before the 85% levy line, at a forecast ratio of 75.6%.
How does a £53.4m fee count for PSR?
It is not charged all at once. The fee (plus capitalised agent and signing costs) is spread over the contract as amortisation — about £14m a year on an assumed 4-year deal — and annual wages are added on top. Squad cost is then measured against football income, with a levy from 85% and points deductions from 115%.
Is the fee confirmed?
The move is recorded as completed by Transfermarkt with a reported fee of £53.4m. Clubs rarely confirm exact fees or structures, so PSRwatch treats it as a reported figure and labels every derived number an estimate.
Could this push Liverpool towards a points deduction?
Not on its own. PSRwatch's forecast leaves the club an estimated £334m short of the 115% red zone where deductions start (six points plus one per £6.5m over).
Methodology
PSRwatch figures are independent estimates built from filed accounts, provider transfer and wage data, and PSRwatch modelling. They are not official Premier League, EFL or UEFA calculations. Where a fee or wage is unconfirmed we say so, and undisclosed fees are never presented as real numbers.
Sources
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