AFCON 2025 prize money confirmed: CAF distributes record $32 million in Morocco

CAF confirms record $32 million prize pool for AFCON 2025, with the winner taking home $7 million. Here's the complete breakdown and what it means for African football federations.

By Youssef Al-HassanPublished Dec 22, 2025, 2:46 PMUpdated Dec 22, 2025, 2:46 PM
AFCON 2025 prize money

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The Confederation of African Football has confirmed the prize money structure for AFCON 2025 in Morocco, marking the largest financial distribution in the tournament's 68-year history. The total prize pool reaches $32 million, with the champion set to receive $7 million.

Full prize money breakdown

CAF's official distribution for the 24-team tournament follows a tiered structure that rewards progression through each knockout stage:

  • Winner: $7 million
  • Runner-up: $4 million
  • Semi-finalists: $2.5 million each
  • Quarter-finalists: $1.3 million each
  • Round of 16 exits: $800,000 each
  • Best third-placed teams (advancing): $700,000
  • Fourth-placed teams in groups: $500,000

A team completing a perfect run from group stage to final victory can accumulate up to $11.6 million in total earnings when combining stage bonuses.

A 40% increase from 2024

The $7 million winner's prize represents a significant jump from the $5 million Ivory Coast received for their triumph in Côte d'Ivoire last year. This 40% increase reflects CAF's improved financial position under president Patrice Motsepe and the growing commercial appeal of African football.

For context, the 2019 edition in Egypt offered just $4.5 million to the winner. The progression over three tournaments demonstrates CAF's commitment to elevating AFCON's financial standing.

Strategic implications for federations

The prize structure carries particular weight for smaller African federations operating on limited budgets. A group-stage exit still guarantees a minimum of $500,000—substantial funding that can support youth development programs, coaching education, and infrastructure improvements.

Nations reaching the quarter-finals secure $1.3 million, often exceeding their annual football federation budgets. This creates genuine incentive for competitive performance beyond mere continental pride.

How AFCON compares globally

Despite the record figures, AFCON's prize pool remains modest by global standards:

  • Euro 2024: €440 million total distribution
  • Copa América 2024: $40 million total
  • Asian Cup 2023: $44 million total
  • AFCON 2025: $32 million total

The gap with UEFA's European Championship is particularly stark—AFCON's entire prize pool represents roughly 7% of Euro 2024's distribution. However, the tournament now surpasses CONCACAF's Gold Cup in financial terms.

Part of a larger financial picture

The prize money forms one component of AFCON 2025's broader economic impact. CAF projects total tournament revenue of $192.6 million, driven by sponsorship deals ($126.2 million), broadcast rights ($46.5 million), and ticketing ($19 million). Net profit is estimated at $113.8 million.

These revenues fund CAF's continental development programs, including youth tournaments, coaching certifications, and infrastructure grants to member associations. The financial health of AFCON directly impacts grassroots football development across Africa's 54 football-playing nations.

Tournament details

AFCON 2025 kicks off on December 21 in Morocco, with the final scheduled for January 18, 2026. Twenty-four nations will compete across six host cities. Defending champions Ivory Coast enter as one of the favorites alongside Morocco, Egypt, Nigeria, and Senegal.

For the participating federations, the financial stakes have never been higher. The prize money represents not just reward for performance, but investment capital for the future of African football.

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Youssef Al-Hassan

38-year-old Saudi journalist based in Riyadh. Expert on Gulf football and the Saudi Pro League. He also tracks European stars playing in the Gulf region and Gulf region players in Europe. He covers AFC Champions League, big-money transfers between Europe and the Gulf, and strategic club developments aimed at competing with major leagues.