Real Madrid have reportedly reached a personal terms agreement with Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez in a deal that could be worth £120m – and with Jose Mourinho back at the Bernabéu looking to rebuild from scratch, the Argentine World Cup winner is shaping up as the centrepiece of the entire project.
What Miguel Serrano Is Reporting – and Why It Matters
Spanish reporter Miguel Serrano, speaking on his YouTube channel, was unambiguous: “Real Madrid have reached an agreement with Enzo Fernandez.” The key caveat, however, is that this agreement covers personal terms only – Fernandez, his agent Javier Pastore, and Real Madrid are aligned on the player’s side of the deal, but the two clubs have not yet agreed a fee.
Serrano was careful to spell out the distinction: “The part of the deal that Real Madrid have not done is an agreement with Chelsea, but there’s a deal with Enzo Fernandez, his agent Javier Pastore, and Real Madrid for him to become a Real Madrid player after the World Cup. That agreement doesn’t mean he’s definitely going to play for Real Madrid; it depends on whether the negotiations between Real Madrid and Chelsea are successful.” In other words, the player wants the move – the clubs now have to agree on price.
Serrano added a telling detail about the mood inside the Bernabéu: “Everyone assumes that the president can leak the signing of Enzo Fernandez because it’s a deal that depends solely on money.” When Florentino Perez is reportedly hinting at a deal publicly, that tends to mean the intent is serious. As we noted when covering Real Madrid’s broader Premier League transfer strategy, Fernandez has been on Madrid’s radar for some time – this is not a sudden pivot.
The Mourinho Blueprint – and Why Fernandez Is the Name at the Top of the List
Jose Mourinho returning to Real Madrid after stints at Chelsea, Manchester United, and Tottenham is already the story of the summer – but the manager’s immediate task is rebuilding a squad that has gone two consecutive years without a major trophy. That context matters enormously for understanding why Fernandez is the target.
Fernandez finished the 2025/26 season with 15 goals and seven assists in all competitions – 22 goal contributions across 54 appearances – remarkable output for a central midfielder and a strong indicator of why Madrid view him as an elite rather than a supplementary signing. He is a box-to-box creative force with the physical engine to press and recover, and he carries genuine big-game credentials from Argentina’s 2022 World Cup triumph. Mourinho’s midfield needs legs, quality, and leaders – Fernandez ticks all three.
Real Madrid have already moved fast this summer, re-signing Nico Paz from Como and completing deals for Ibrahima Konate and Denzel Dumfries. Fernandez would be signing number four. This is a club building with purpose, not tinkering at the edges – and Madrid’s established pattern of targeting elite Premier League midfielders at the £120m price point makes this particular pursuit feel very familiar indeed.
Chelsea’s Position – The £120m Question
Chelsea paid £106.7m to sign Fernandez from Benfica in January 2023, setting a British transfer record at the time. Any sale below a meaningful premium on that figure would be difficult to justify – particularly given his performances last season made him arguably Chelsea’s standout player in an otherwise dismal campaign. Chelsea’s reported asking price sits closer to £125m, slightly above the £120m figure in circulation.
The complication is that Chelsea’s ongoing PSR pressures mean a high-value sale carries genuine financial appeal, even for a player they would rather keep. Selling Fernandez at £120m-plus cleans up the books considerably. The question is whether Chelsea view this as an acceptable exit or a damaging one – and right now, with the player reportedly pushing for the move, their leverage is eroding.
The Fee Structure – Where This Gets Complicated
Here is where the story has genuine teeth: Real Madrid are said to be exploring a player-plus-cash structure to bring the headline fee down, with Aurélien Tchouaméni or Eduardo Camavinga potentially involved. Chelsea, for their part, have been linked with an interest in Dean Huijsen or Tchouaméni as sweeteners. That kind of swap negotiation introduces complexity – valuations, wage structures, and squad needs all have to align simultaneously.
Fernandez’s agent Pastore has reportedly been in direct contact with Real Madrid for months, which suggests this is a coordinated push rather than exploratory noise. The personal terms agreement confirms the player’s intent. What it does not do is force Chelsea’s hand – and until a formal offer lands on Todd Boehly’s desk, this remains unfinished business.
The Verdict – What Happens Next
Real Madrid have the player’s agreement. Chelsea have the leverage on price. Mourinho has the project that makes Madrid an attractive destination. The deal is real – but it is not done, and the gap between £120m and Chelsea’s valuation is wide enough that a straightforward cash bid alone may not get this over the line.
The next move belongs to Florentino Perez: whether he submits a formal offer, pursues a player-exchange structure, or holds firm and waits for Chelsea to blink. One thing is certain – with Fernandez already aligned on personal terms and Mourinho publicly being teased with his arrival, Real Madrid are not walking away from this one quietly.
