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Manchester United have released their new home kit ahead of the 2025-26 season.
Their fresh strip costs £120 with short sleeves at the premium level, while the £130 long-sleeved option sold out on the club’s website within a few hours of release.
Meanwhile, the standard kit price is £85.
United have a mammoth kit deal with Adidas worth £900million, which runs until June 2035.
The pricing for the men’s and women’s teams are mostly similar although there is no long-sleeved option for the ladies.
Meanwhile, the baby option, which includes both a shirt and shorts, comes in at £40.

Manchester United have released their home shirt for the 2025-26 campaign

Mason Mount is seen modelling the new kit, which retails for £85 at the standard price and up to £130 with long sleeves

The back of the collar also features a ‘Theatre of Dreams’ sign-off in homage to Old Trafford
During their run to their Europa League final, fans produced giant tifos to inspire the players.
And the club paid homage to that by making the new home shirt into a giant tifo at Old Trafford in their video posted on social media.
In the official photos taken the likes of Manuel Ugarte, Bruno Fernandes, Amad Diallo and Mason Mount can be seen posing in the strip as well as women’s captain Maya Le Tissier and forward Leah Galton.
The design of the latest home kit takes inspiration from Old Trafford with an abstract sleeve graphic in different shades of red showcasing elements of the pitch, stands and tunnel.
Completing the look is a stylish black and white V-neck collar and sleeve cuffs, the three-stripes running down the shoulders in black, and the adidas logo and sponsor logos in a contrasting white colour.
A final nod to the club’s rich heritage is a ‘Theatre of Dreams’ sign-off on the back of the collar.
Senior design director at Adidas, Jurgen Rank, said: “The colour red is fundamental to the club’s DNA.
‘There have been many different expressions of it over the years and, for this season, we wanted to do something a little different, using the sleeves as a canvas.

United’s stars were smiling as the tried on the home kit, but will fans be smiling at their performances in it?
‘The abstract graphic stays true to the club’s DNA while providing an innovative look and feel to an otherwise classy and classic jersey.’
United will be hoping their new kit can inspired them to greater heights than the ones they reached in the 2024-25 season.
While they did make the Europa League final, it was a miserable campaign domestically as Ruben Amorim’s side stumbled home in 15th in the Premier League.
