Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo has joined Saudi Arabian club Al Nassr on a two-year contract through until 2025.
Al Nassr - nine-time Saudi Pro League champions - described the signing as "history in the making".
"This is a signing that will not only inspire our club to achieve even greater success but inspire our league, our nation and future generations, boys and girls to be the best version of themselves," said the club's president Musli Al Muammar.
"Welcome [Ronaldo] to your new home".
The deal is reportedly worth 200 million euro (NZ$337m) per season.
"I am eager to experience a new football league in a different country. Al Nassr Club's vision is very inspiring," the Saudi club quoted Ronaldo as saying.
He will arrive in Saudi Arabia with a vast collection of club honours after a glittering spell at Spanish giants Real Madrid from 2009-18 where he won two LaLiga titles, two Spanish Cups, four Champions League titles and three Club World Cups.
He went on to score a club record 451 times for Real and has more than 800 senior goals overall for club and country.
Ronaldo claimed two Serie A titles and a Copa Italia trophy in three years at Juventus before rejoining United with whom he had bagged three Premier League crowns, the FA Cup, two League Cups, the Champions League and Club World Cup.
He played for Portugal in Qatar, where he became the first player to score in five World Cups after netting a penalty in his side's opening Group H game against Ghana. Portugal were knocked out in the quarter-finals by Morocco.
Ronaldo said Qatar would probably be his last World Cup as he plans to retire at 40, with a move to Saudi Arabia likely to mark the swansong in the career one of the game's greatest current players alongside Lionel Messi.
Reuters/Newshub.