
Fifa is set to give more than $1bn in prize money to clubs participating in the Club World Cup as the European Club Association (ECA), negotiating on behalf of clubs in Europe including Chelsea and Manchester City, closes in on a deal.
Multiple sources have confirmed to BBC Sport that the 32 clubs involved, including 12 European clubs, will split what is anticipated to be the biggest prize in club football across a seven-match format.
It is partly based on the $1bn exclusive global TV deal agreed with sports streaming service DAZN in December.
The inaugural tournament, taking place in the United States, begins on 14 June and finishes with the final in New Jersey on 13 July.
On an individual club basis, those involved will receive a participation fee for entering the group stage and performance fees based on progression to later rounds.
Multiple senior sources have explained that Fifa and the ECA are also in talks about bringing in substantial solidarity payments for non-participating clubs, which is expected to be followed by similar distributions for clubs in Africa, Asia and the Americas at a later date
Fifa and the ECA are yet to comment publicly about the negotiations.
The ECA is expected to gain a higher revenue share than clubs from other continents because of the importance of their clubs to the competition, and because those members will be unable to play lucrative overseas pre-season tours.
Fifa president Gianni Infantino said in December: "Whatever Fifa does, [it] has to be global.
"[Fifa] has to involve the globe. [Fifa] has to give opportunities and chances to [everyone] all over the world, and the Club World Cup is doing exactly that."
Fifa, meanwhile, will not make a single dollar of profit from the tournament and says it will reinvest the entire $1bn into global club football.
There will be a Fifa Council meeting to update members on the progress of the tournament, which will be hosted in 12 stadiums across 11 US cities during the month-long summer event.
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