Financial expert Stefan Borson has now explained why Tottenham can afford a huge summer spending spree after breaking their transfer record twice.Tottenham Hotspur’s expenditure so far this summer transfer window has certainly caught the eye of many, with the club showing a willingness to splash the cash. This was made rather evident when Spurs went on to break their transfer record fee for a new signing twice in the space of a week.The £85 million signing of Mateus Fernandes toppled the previously held £65 million record by Dominic Solanke from back in 2024, but Spurs went one better by completing a club‑record £100 million deal for Sandro Tonali.These big‑money moves are not expected to stop just yet, with reports claiming that Spurs are preparing a mammoth bid for Bournemouth forward Eli Junior Kroupi.Photo by Eddie Keogh/Getty ImagesStefan Borson explains Tottenham’s summer spendingWith Tottenham continuing their spending spree, financial expert Stefan Borson has now explained why the Lilywhites have been able to invest so heavily this summer.Speaking on talkSport, Borson suggested Spurs’ recent spending is not the result of reckless financial planning, but rather a correction after years of operating well below the levels of their Premier League rivals. He also explained why the club remain in a strong position from a Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) perspective, while revealing where the funding for their transfer business is expected to come from.Discussing Tottenham’s financial position, Borson said on talkSport: “Well the starting point is that they are spending, we talked about this many, many times. “They spent too little for quite a long time, so they got to the point where they were underspending on wages in particular and they were being very prudent in the transfer market, although still spending.“All that is really happening is a correction that brings them more in line with Arsenal, City, Liverpool and Manchester United of a couple of years ago. United are going slightly down a different path at the moment, and Chelsea of course.“So really they are just correcting to that sort of level of spending on wages. From a regulatory perspective, a PSR perspective, there are no issues. They have got loads of capacity there on PSR.“Because they are not in Europe, they have an 85 per cent cap and no UEFA tests at all next season, so that makes that bit a little bit easier as well in the short term.“In terms of the transfer fees, the only real question is the cash, and the cash is going to come from the Lewis family, and everything is sorted on that side.” View this post on Instagram A post shared by talkSPORT (@talksport)Spurs remain well within PSR limitsIndeed, Tottenham are well in the clear when it comes to PSR rules this summer, with reports revealing that Spurs can spend as much as £250 million more and still be clear of trouble.And while Tottenham have broken their wage structure this summer transfer window, making Tonali their highest‑paid player on £250,000 a week, they still have a rather low wage bill compared to their local rivals.As it stands, Tonali is the only Spurs player earning more than £200,000 a week, with several other stars on £195,000 as the next highest wage in the squad.Tottenham 2025/26 wages plus Tonali and FernandesPlayerPositionCountryAnnual SalaryWeekly SalarySandro TonaliMidfielderItaly£13,000,000£250,000Cristian RomeroDefenderArgentina£10,140,000£195,000Xavi SimonsMidfielderNetherlands£10,140,000£195,000Mateus FernandesMidfielderPortugal£9,100,000£175,000James MaddisonMidfielderEngland£8,840,000£170,000Conor GallagherMidfielderEngland£8,320,000£160,000Mohammed KudusMidfielderGhana£7,800,000£150,000Dominic SolankeForwardEngland£7,280,000£140,000Dejan KulusevskiForwardSweden£5,720,000£110,000RicharlisonForwardBrazil£4,680,000£90,000Micky van de VenDefenderNetherlands£4,680,000£90,000Radu DragusinDefenderRomania£4,420,000£85,000Pedro PorroDefenderSpain£4,420,000£85,000Ben DaviesDefenderWales£4,160,000£80,000Rodrigo BentancurMidfielderUruguay£3,900,000£75,000Archie GrayMidfielderEngland£3,900,000£75,000Destiny UdogieDefenderItaly£3,900,000£75,000Guglielmo VicarioGoalkeeperItaly£3,900,000£75,000Pape Matar SarrMidfielderSenegal£3,640,000£70,000Kevin DansoDefenderAustria£3,380,000£65,000Lucas BergvallMidfielderSweden£3,120,000£60,000Mathys TelForwardFrance£2,860,000£55,000Wilson OdobertMidfielderFrance£2,080,000£40,000Djed SpenceDefenderEngland£2,080,000£40,000Antonin KinskyGoalkeeperCzechia£1,560,000£30,000SouzaDefenderBrazil£1,300,000£25,000Brandon AustinGoalkeeperEngland£780,000£15,000Ashley PhillipsDefenderEngland£780,000£15,000Dane ScarlettStrikerEngland£648,000£12,000Mikey MooreMidfielderEngland£260,000£5,000Yang-min HyeokMidfielderSouth Korea£260,000£5,000Jamie DonleyMidfielderEngland£213,200£4,100Will LankshearStrikerEngland£176,800£3,400READ MORE: Tottenham fans react angrily as club ‘makes contact’ with Randal Kolo MuaniThe post Finance expert reveals how Tottenham can spend even more despite breaking transfer record twice appeared first on Spurs Web.