A 5% increase in season ticket prices at Old Trafford will help to return Manchester United to "the top of domestic and European football", say the club.
It is the the fourth year in a row United have increased season ticket prices by that percentage, with chief executive Omar Berrada saying in 2025 that it “would not be right to keep prices unchanged while costs rise and the club continues to face financial issues”.
The Red Devils sit third in the Premier League under interim head coach Michael Carrick and hope to return to the Champions League for the first time in three seasons.
"We have a clear objective to return Manchester United to the top of domestic and European football," the club said in a statement.
"We want to keep investing in the team and improving our facilities so fans get the best possible experience. We also need to make sure the club stays financially sustainable taking into account inflation and rising costs.
"It is within this context we have made the decision to increase season ticket prices by around 5% across all areas of Old Trafford."
The Manchester United Supporters' Trust pointed to the the Football Supporters' Association appeal to clubs in November to halt ticket prices for the next two seasons and the relocation of 600 more fans for hospitality seats in the Sir Bobby Charlton Stand as reasons for frustration at the decision.
"It is disappointing that the club has ignored our call, as part of the FSA's league-wide campaign, for a ticket price freeze," MUST said in a statement.
"Supporters are paying more and more to watch their team, and as the FSA campaign said: enough is enough.
"We've also learned that 600 more loyal fans are being moved for ever more hospitality.
"Those people will be understandably furious, and need to be better treated by the club than those who went through the same thing last year were."