Just did an interesting comparison of the different models across the top 2 divisions in the big 5 European leagues. The German model of 50+1 fan involvement is streets ahead.

1. Price Per Game (League Matches Only)
Assumptions:
Most leagues: 19 home games (20 in 2nd tiers like EFL Championship / Ligue 2)

England
Premier League: ~£650 ÷ 19 ≈ £34/game
EFL Championship: ~£450 ÷ 23 ≈ £20/game

Spain
La Liga: ~€600 ÷ 19 ≈ €32/game
Segunda División: ~€350 ÷ 21 ≈ €17/game

Germany
Bundesliga: ~€325 ÷ 17 ≈ €19/game
Bundesliga: ~€250 ÷ 17 ≈ €15/game

Italy
Serie A: ~€550 ÷ 19 ≈ €29/game
Serie B: ~€325 ÷ 19 ≈ €17/game

France
Ligue 1: ~€400 ÷ 17 ≈ €24/game
Ligue 2: ~€250 ÷ 19 ≈ €13/game

2. % of Median Annual Income
Using rough median incomes:
UK: ~£35,000
Spain: ~€27,000
Germany: ~€43,000
Italy: ~€30,000
France: ~€35,000
Top Divisions
England: ~1.9%
Spain: ~2.2%
Germany: ~0.8%
Italy: ~1.8%
France: ~1.1%
Second Divisions
England: ~1.3%
Spain: ~1.3%
Germany: ~0.6%
Italy: ~1.1%
France: ~0.7%

This is where things flip:
Germany becomes dramatically more affordable
Spain becomes one of the least affordable relative to income
Bundesliga fans pay:
~40–50% less per game
~2–3× lower income burden
That’s not random—it reflects governance (fan ownership influence).