Erling Haaland is having a moment. A big one.
If you ask soccer fans in Europe, they’ll shrug and say, “Yeah, we know. He’s been unstoppable for years.” But for a lot of American sports fans, this World Cup is the first time they’ve really noticed the tall, blond-haired Norwegian who scores goals like he’s playing on easy mode.
That’s all changed now. Team USA is still the main team Americans are cheering for, but Norway has turned into everyone’s favorite second team to watch. Haaland’s wild scoring streak is a huge reason why. So is the underdog story of Norway making its first World Cup run in 30 years. And honestly, people just want another excuse to hear that thunderous Viking “row” chant from the stands.
But here’s the thing: when Haaland isn’t busy wrecking World Cup defenses, he plays for Manchester City. And once you look at his contract, you’ll realize his paycheck is almost as ridiculous as his goal-scoring stats.
A Soccer Star Who Was Basically Built in a Lab
Haaland’s path to superstardom almost feels too perfect to be real.
He was born in Leeds, England, back in 2000, while his dad, Alfie Haaland, was playing in the Premier League. Alfie spent years as a defender and midfielder for teams like Nottingham Forest, Leeds United, and Manchester City. So Erling wasn’t just some kid who liked soccer. He was raised right in the middle of the exact world he’d eventually take over.
When he was still little, his family packed up and moved to Norway. He grew up in a small town called Bryne, on the southwest coast, and joined the local youth club there. Nobody was calling him a superstar yet. He was just a really tall, really driven kid who happened to have an insane mix of speed, size, balance, and goal-scoring instinct.
He made his first-team debut for Bryne as a teenager, then moved on to Molde, where he trained under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer. That’s when things started to click. During his time there, in 2018, he scored four goals in just the first 21 minutes of a match against Brann. That one game got scouts all over Europe asking, “Wait, who is this guy?”
From Prospect to Unstoppable Force
His next stop was Red Bull Salzburg in Austria, and that’s really where he blew up.
He was already scoring nonstop in the Austrian league, but once the Champions League started, things got out of hand. In his very first Champions League match, he scored a hat trick against Genk. From there, he just kept going, tearing through defenses like it was nothing.
He also pulled off one of the most bizarre performances in soccer history at the 2019 FIFA U20 World Cup. Playing against Honduras, Haaland scored nine goals in a single match. Nine. That’s not a typo, and it’s honestly the perfect preview of the career that followed.
By January 2020, Borussia Dortmund won the bidding war to sign him. Dortmund turned out to be the perfect stepping stone between “exciting young player” and “global superstar.” During his time in Germany, he scored 86 goals in just 89 appearances, a stat so wild it barely seems possible. Every big club in Europe wanted him, and since his contract had a release clause, everyone knew there’d only be a short window to grab him.
Manchester City Cashes In
Manchester City won that race in 2022, paying around €60 million (about $65 million) to activate his release clause. Looking back now, that price tag looks like an absolute steal. City wasn’t just signing a striker. They were adding the perfect finishing piece to Pep Guardiola’s already dominant system.
His first contract with City reportedly paid him around £375,000 a week, or roughly $25 million a year before bonuses. And almost immediately, he made that number look like a bargain. In his very first season, he scored 36 Premier League goals, 52 goals across all competitions, won the Golden Boot, and helped City win the treble.
By the time City sat down to negotiate a new long-term deal in January 2025, there was really only one question left: how much would it cost to make sure Haaland never left?
The £525,000-a-Week Deal
In January 2025, Manchester City solved that problem for good.
They signed Haaland to a massive new contract running all the way through June 2034. That means City has him locked in until he’s 34 years old, essentially buying up the rest of his prime and shutting down years of rumors about a future move to Real Madrid.
His current base salary with City sits at £525,000 per week. That comes out to £27.3 million a year. Converted to U.S. dollars, that’s roughly $700,000 a week, or about $37 million a year, and that’s before bonuses, endorsements, or image-rights money even enter the picture.
Bonuses Built for a Goal-Scoring Machine
Here’s where things get even crazier. Haaland’s contract is famous around the soccer world for its bonus structure, which is packed with big, easy-to-hit incentives. He earns extra money for things like:
- Simply starting a match
- Scoring a goal (which he does constantly)
- Winning matches
- Hitting season-long goal targets
Once all those bonuses kick in, his weekly pay can jump to somewhere between £850,000 and £900,000. That’s about $1.1 million to $1.15 million a week in U.S. dollars, or roughly $60 million a year.
That makes him the highest-paid player in the Premier League. At this World Cup, he ranks fifth among the tournament’s highest earners, trailing only Lionel Messi ($70 million base salary), Kylian Mbappé ($75 million), Neymar ($80 million), and Cristiano Ronaldo ($300 million).
The Endorsement Money on Top
City’s paycheck isn’t even the whole story. Haaland also pulls in around $20 million a year from endorsement deals.
He’s become one of the most marketable athletes on the planet. His biggest deal is with Nike, which signed him to a long-term boot and apparel contract. He’s also linked to brands in watches, electronics, sports drinks, and global lifestyle marketing.
What makes his appeal so unique is that he doesn’t fit the usual “smooth soccer celebrity” mold. He’s more like a larger-than-life cartoon character brought to life: a giant blond Norwegian with a deadpan sense of humor and a scoring record that barely seems real.
Adding It All Up
Once you combine his salary, bonuses, image rights, and endorsements, Haaland’s total yearly earnings land around $80 million.
Right now, we estimate his net worth at $100 million, making him the ninth-richest player at this World Cup. But given his jaw-dropping form over the last few weeks, his decade-long Manchester City deal, and the wave of new endorsements likely headed his way, it wouldn’t be shocking to see that number double before long.
By the time the next World Cup rolls around in 2030, Haaland will only be 29. If Ronaldo, Messi, and Neymar have slowed down or retired by then, don’t be surprised if Haaland walks in as the richest active soccer player on the planet.
For more behind-the-scenes breakdowns of the world’s biggest sports stars and their fortunes, keep it locked to EarlyMagazine UK — where the real numbers meet the real stories.

