Cristiano Ronaldo is planning the launch of an exclusive private members club, according to an unconfirmed report in VnExpress International. No location, membership fee structure, operating partner, or timeline has been disclosed. No affiliated entity or development firm has issued a statement.
The report arrives as the private members club sector confronts margin pressure and slower post-COVID traffic. Soho House shares trade at $5.12, down 68% from their July 2021 SPAC debut, after the company reported $1.01 billion in revenue against a net loss of $67 million for fiscal 2023. Membership churn in North America reached 8.7% in Q4 2023, the highest quarterly figure since 2019. Meanwhile, new entrants — including Casa Cipriani, NeueHouse, and ZZ's Club — have opened 22 locations globally since January 2022, fragmenting allocations in gateway cities where real estate costs and staffing remain elevated.
Ronaldo's brand operates on a different commercial logic than hospitality operators. His CR7-branded portfolio includes hotels (Pestana partnership, four properties operational), fragrances, footwear, and a $200 million per year contract with Saudi club Al-Nassr. His Instagram account holds 639 million followers, the highest of any individual globally, which translates to distribution leverage but not operational expertise. Athlete-backed hospitality ventures have produced inconsistent returns: LeBron James's Blaze Pizza stake delivered an estimated $35 million return before partial exit; Stephen Curry's minority stake in Motto by Hilton yielded undisclosed upside; but David Beckham's Haig Club whisky venture with Diageo was discontinued in major markets after failing to reach 100,000 case volume.
The question is not whether Ronaldo can attract founding members — scarcity and celebrity adjacency reliably drive deposit velocity — but whether the venture can sustain 70%+ occupancy and $15,000+ annual dues at scale without hospitality infrastructure or a proven clubhouse operating team. Private members clubs require 18-24 months of pre-opening capital, trained concierge staff, curated F&B programs, and local regulatory approvals that vary by jurisdiction. Soho House spent an average of $18 million per location to build out its last five houses; smaller independents have deployed $8-12 million with leaner fit-outs. Ronaldo's team has not indicated whether the club will be a standalone asset, a licensing play with an existing operator, or a brand extension within a hotel property.
Allocators and operators should monitor three near-term signals. First, whether an established hospitality partner — Aman, Rosewood, Montage, or a European independent — attaches its name and balance sheet to the project within 90 days. Second, whether a location is disclosed in a gateway city (London, Dubai, Miami, Los Angeles) where competitive clubhouse density already exceeds six branded houses. Third, whether Ronaldo's CR7 entity files formation documents in a known offshore jurisdiction (Cayman, BVI, Luxembourg) or a property-holding entity emerges in local land registries. These are the early markers that separate licensing theater from capital deployment.
The private members club as a commercial format remains viable — Ned's Club London reported a 3,200-person waitlist at launch; The Twenty Two in Mayfair filled 900 founding memberships in under five months — but only when underwritten by operators who understand that exclusivity is a revenue ceiling, not a floor.