This article contains information about the kit manufacturers of each and every Premier League club for the 2022-23 season.
Also Read – Premier League teams’ kit suppliers for 2023–24 season
Arsenal signed a kit deal with German sportswear giant Adidas in October 2018. They agreed on a five-year deal reportedly worth £300 million starting July 2019. With this deal ended Arsenal’s five-year partnership with Puma.
In May 2022, it was announced that Manchester-headquartered sportswear brand Castore would replace Kappa as Villa’s kit supplier and become a Principal Partner in a multi-year deal starting with the 2022-23 season.
The deal sees Castore supply match apparel, training and leisure wear to Villa’s senior and academy teams (both men’s and women’s).
The Manchester-headquartered British sportswear brand has been serving AFC Bournemouth as their official kit supplier since the 2017-18 season. The two last renewed their partnership in July 2021 as part of a five-year agreement.
Umbro has also served as the club’s kit supplier in the past: from 1974 to 1978 and 1983 to 1986.
The Manchester-based British sportswear brand became the official kit supplier of the club ahead of the 2019-20 season, in May 2019, replacing rival German brand Adidas. The partnership between the two parties is currently set to run until 2023.
Brighton & Hove Albion FC extended their long-term partnership with Nike in June 2019 as they penned a three-year extension with the American sportswear giant until the end of the 2021-22 season.
The Beaverton, Oregon-based company has been the Technical Kit Supplier of the Seagulls since 2014 and continues to do so for the club’s men’s and women’s sides — both senior and youth setups.
The last extension of the Nike-BHAFC partnership was announced in January 2022 — a three-year deal reportedly worth £2.5 million per year that is set to run until 2024.
Chelsea signed a long-term deal with Nike in October 2016 as their official kit supplier from the 2017-18 season, ending their eleven-year partnership with Adidas.
The deal, reportedly worth north of US$1 billion over 15 years, was Nike’s biggest deal with a Premier League club at the time, before the American sportswear giant signed an even more lucrative deal with Liverpool FC in January 2020.
The Bologna-headquartered Italian sportswear brand returned as Crystal Palace’s kit supplier ahead of the 2022-23 season, having previously served the club in that role between 2014 and 2018.
Everton ended their six-year partnership with Umbro to sign a three-year kit deal with Aarhus-headquartered Danish sportswear brand Hummel.
Announced in May 2020, the three-year, £10m-a-year deal kicked in with the start of the 2020-21 season.
German sportswear giant Adidas has enjoyed a long relationship with Adidas. The two first partnered in 1977, then 1997, and then 2013, the year they have enjoyed a continuous partnership since, which was further extended to 2023 three years ago.
The deal sees Adidas serve as the official kit supplier for Fulham’s matchday and training wear. It also sees its products sold at the club’s home ground, Craven Cottage.
The German sportswear giant replaced Kappa as the official kit supplier of the Peacocks ahead of the 2020-21 season (announced in June 2020) on a five-year deal.
While the financial details of the deal were not revealed, Leeds United were reported to have been dealt a sweeter hand with their return to the Premier League.
Leicester City signed Adidas as their official kit supplier in May 2018. Adidas replaced rival German sportswear giant Puma, which served as the Foxes’ Official Technical Partner for the five years prior to that.
In January 2020, Liverpool FC announced Nike as their new Official Kit Supplier starting with the 2020-21 season in a multi-year deal reportedly worth £30 million per year.
While this value is less than the £45 million New Balance, another American sportswear company, was paying LFC every year, Nike’s promise of increased brand value and better sales and sales-based addons turned the Merseyside club to the Beaverton, Oregon-headquartered sportswear giant. Nike’s proposal of paying the club a 20-percent cut of the sales of all LFC products makes this partnership capable of being the most lucrative one in English football.
Liverpool’s stock has resurged over the past seasons with their renaissance as a powerhouse under Jürgen Klopp, at the back of which they released their previous kit supplier, New Balance, which they deemed could no longer match the marketing and distribution potential Nike was offering, which was more congruent with their ambition. This led to a legal dispute, and eventually, the London High Court ruled in Liverpool’s favour, rendering their association ending with New Balance on a relatively bitter note.
Man City ended a six-year association with Nike and signed German sportswear giant Puma as their official kit supplier in February 2019, with the deal kicking off with the 2019-20 season.
The deal is reportedly worth £650 million over ten years and also covers Man City’s sister clubs in Australia (Melbourne City FC), Spain (Girona FC), Uruguay (Montevideo City Torque) and China (Sichuan Jiuniu FC).
In August 2022, Puma unveiled Man City’s third kit for the 2022-23 season on the Land of Games experience developed by game creation system Roblox, thereby taking their Man City partnership “into the metaverse”.
Man United’s deal with Adidas broke all kit-deal records when it was announced back in July 2014. The German sportswear giant replaced its American rival Nike, whose £24m-a-season deal with Man United ended with the end of the 2014-15 season, after a thirteen-year stint.
With the deal worth at least £750 million over ten years, Adidas has been the Official Kit Supplier of MUFC since the start of the 2015-16 season. The German sportswear and sports equipment giant’s previous biggest contract at the time this deal was announced was its €35m-a-year contract with Real Madrid CF.
The Liverpool-headquartered British sportswear brand became Newcastle United’s new kit supplier in July 2021, replacing German rival brand Puma, which had been supplying Newcastle United kits for the previous eleven years.
Reportedly worth £5 million per year, the “multi-year” deal not only sees Castore design the various matchday and training kits for the club, it also sees the sportswear brand handle the e-commerce operations at the club. This includes refurbishment of Newcastle’s physical and online stores as well as increased merchandising opportunities.
The Bologna-headquartered Italian sportswear brand was announced as Forest’s official technical partner in March 2018 in a deal that kicked off with the start of the 2018-19 season, replacing rival German brand Adidas.
The two parties last announced an extension to their partnership in October 2020.
Having started with the 2021-22 season, the five-year deal sees Hummel replace American rival brand Under Armour, which was Southampton’s kit supplier since 2016 on a £9m-a-year deal and had a contract until 2023, but both parties agreed to mutually part ways prematurely by two seasons.
Hummel previously served as the Saints’ kit supplier between 1987 and 1991.
American sportswear giant Nike became Spurs’ Official Kit Provider in 2017. The very next year, in October 2018, the two reached an agreement for a bumper fifteen-year extension, making it one of the longest deals in Nike’s history.
The current deal between the two parties runs until 2033 and is reportedly worth £30 million per annum, approximately.
Manchester-headquartered British sportswear company Umbro has been the Technical Partner of West Ham’s men’s, women’s and youth academy’s matchday and training kits since 2015, when it replaced German sportswear rival Adidas.
The two parties last extended their deal in a long-term agreement in June 2020 that came at the back of their previous agreement, which was only made the year before, in May 2019, to extend their deal beyond 2023 and bump up the previous £5m-per-year contract.
The Liverpool-headquartered British sportswear brand was announced as Wolves’ new Official Technical Kit Supplier in November 2020, replacing Adidas’ £3m-a-year deal from the start of the 2021-22 season with a deal the club confirmed “boasts the largest technical partner sponsorship fee” in their history.
Castore supplies the club with kits for the players and the non-playing staff, and under license from the sportswear company, Wolves also manufacture and distribute a wide range of replica products as well as training and travel wear.
Also Read
Premier League clubs and their kit suppliers for 2021-22 season
Premier League clubs and their kit suppliers for 2020-21 season
Premier League clubs and their kit suppliers for 2019-20 season
Premier League clubs and their kit suppliers for 2018-19 season
CLUB NAME | KIT SPONSOR |
ARSENAL | ADIDAS |
ASTON VILLA | CASTORE |
BOURNEMOUTH | UMBRO |
BRENTFORD | UMBRO |
BRIGHTON & HOVE ALBION | NIKE |
CHELSEA | NIKE |
CRYSTAL PALACE | MACRON |
EVERTON | HUMMEL |
FULHAM | ADIDAS |
LEEDS UNITED | ADIDAS |
LEICESTER CITY | ADIDAS |
LIVERPOOL | NIKE |
MANCHESTER CITY | PUMA |
MANCHESTER UNITED | ADIDAS |
NEWCASTLE UNITED | CASTORE |
NOTTINGHAM FOREST | MACRON |
SOUTHAMPTON | HUMMEL |
TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR | NIKE |
WEST HAM UNITED | UMBRO |
WOLVERHAMPTON WANDERERS | CASTORE |
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