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Inter and Lazio pocket record Coppa Italia prize money after 2026 final

Inter and Lazio earned record prize money from the 2026 Coppa Italia final after Inter beat Lazio 2-0, with both clubs receiving boosted payments tied to the competition's

Inter beat Lazio 2-0 in the Coppa Italia final on Wednesday, and both clubs received record prize money from the competition's payouts, according to Football Italia. The outcome not only delivered Inter domestic silverware but also produced a financial windfall for the two finalists.

Why it matters

Cup finals carry sporting prestige, but they also bring financial rewards that matter to club budgets, transfer planning and season evaluations. Record prize money from the Coppa Italia final increases the immediate returns for Inter as winners and for Lazio as runners-up, affecting short-term revenue figures for both Serie A clubs.

What Football Italia reported

Football Italia’s coverage states that Inter claimed the double by beating Lazio 2-0 in Wednesday’s Coppa Italia final and that the match produced record earnings for the two clubs. The report focuses on how much Inter and Lazio earned as a result of the final, describing the payments as record-breaking for the competition.

Key implications for the clubs

Financial boosts from cup success can be used in multiple ways: to balance books, reinvest in transfers or wages, or offset other seasonal shortfalls. For Inter, winning the Coppa Italia completes a domestic double and adds prize income to the sporting success. For Lazio, reaching the final yields a notable payout despite the defeat.

  • Inter beat Lazio 2-0 in the Coppa Italia final (Football Italia).
  • Both finalists received record prize money tied to the final (Football Italia).
  • The payments are described as record-breaking for the Coppa Italia (Football Italia).

What is missing / needs verification

The supplied source metadata does not include the precise sums paid to Inter and Lazio, nor the breakdown of revenue components (ticket receipts, broadcast shares, federation prize pools). It also does not specify how these figures compare numerically to previous years’ payouts or cite an official FIGC statement. These details should be confirmed from the full Football Italia article or primary FIGC financial releases.

What happens next

Further reporting should aim to publish the exact prize amounts and the federation’s explanation of the record figure. Clubs may reflect the additional revenue in their 2025–26 financial summaries and transfer-window planning; official confirmations will clarify the scale of the impact.