
Aston Villa has struck an important sponsorship deal with Greek online betting company Betano worth £40m (AU$77.4 mil) over the next two seasons.
This would become the club’s most lucrative front-of-shirt sponsor in their history and comes at a crucial time where Villa need to drive commercial revenue given the strain on Premier League clubs from Profit and Sustainability Rules.
Villa announced losses of nearly £120million (AU$232.3 million) across 2023, which UEFA claim was the highest in Europe. The mega-deal with Betano coincides with club’s new partnership with Adidas, who will take over from Castore as Villa’s kit manufacturer.
Whilst the club have claimed that the huge financial losses are “in line with their strategic business plan”, there is no doubt they wanted to find the best suitor out of this new deal.
Aston Villa were only allowed to strike a two year deal which runs until 2026 because the Premier League have introduced a ban on gambling companies becoming front of shirt sponsors which comes into effect from the start of the 2026/27 season.
Betano are quickly expanding in the European football market, with UEFA added the company as a global sponsor for the 2024 Euros alongside their current deals with huge Portuguese clubs FC Porto and Sporting CP.
Aston Villa currently have a deal with gambling firm BK8 who sit at the front of their shirts from the 2023/24 season, and the club are doubling down on gambling sponsors with this Betano deal, something that is controversial amongst their own fans.
Following the BK8 deal, Aston Villa fan groups protested the team allying with a company from a taboo sector such as gambling and it remains to be seen what the reaction will be when the club officially announces this new deal.
The main aim for Villa is to boost their commercial revenue as they push for Champions League qualification which would rid the club of some financial stress.
The deal is controversial but a required one for Aston Villa and the club that is taking the right steps to ensure they avoid a point deduction or a fine as the Premier League looks to really clamp down on the Profit & Sustainability rules.













