Connect with us

Manchester United

Rashford Open to United Stay But Club Want Him Gone

Rashford Open to Man United Return After Barca Clause Expires

Footballer in red kit standing alone in stadium tunnel, contemplating uncertain future

Barcelona allowed their €30m option to buy Marcus Rashford to expire on Monday, June 16, and for the first time since his loan departure in 2024, the 28-year-old has signalled a willingness to remain at Manchester United – only to find that the club has no intention of having him back.

The Athletic reports that Rashford would prefer to stay at Old Trafford rather than move to a Premier League rival this summer. Ben Jacobs, reporting separately, confirmed the clause expiry and was unambiguous on United’s position: Rashford will return to pre-season training after the World Cup, but that is a logistical reality rather than a welcome. United want a permanent sale.

The Clause, The Contract, and The Numbers

The structure of the original loan is worth understanding. As covered in detail when the Barcelona move was first agreed, the €30m option was designed to be payable across three instalments through to 2028 – a structure built around La Liga’s financial fair play constraints rather than any genuine uncertainty about whether Barcelona wanted him. The instalments made the headline number more manageable; the expiry makes it moot.

Rashford has two years remaining on his United contract and is earning approximately £325,000 per week. A £40m release clause exists for Premier League clubs, with Liverpool and Manchester City specifically carved out. United’s broader wage-bill reset makes that salary a pressing problem regardless of transfer fee, and the Manchester Evening News reports that the club’s hierarchy view a sale as non-negotiable.

United’s Internal Decision – And Carrick’s Overruled View

The Manchester Evening News also reports that manager Michael Carrick was prepared to reintegrate Rashford into his squad. That position was taken to the leadership group and rejected. There are no plans to bring him back into the fold – the decision is institutional, not just managerial, which makes any reversal considerably harder to engineer.

Rashford’s year in Spain was not one to dismiss. Across his Barcelona spell he contributed 14 goals and 14 assists in all competitions, picking up a La Liga title and Spanish Super Cup along the way. Barcelona’s decision to let the clause lapse was framed within the club as a financial call rather than a performance verdict – signing Anthony Gordon shifted their attacking priorities, and the €30m plus wages was deemed too heavy under La Liga’s spending rules.

Who Else Is In The Picture

Aston Villa have been linked to Rashford on multiple occasions, including during his time as their loanee last season, and remain a credible domestic option. Arsenal and Chelsea have also been flagged as clubs made aware of his availability, though punditry reaction to an Arsenal move has been mixed, with questions about whether Rashford fits Mikel Arteta’s system and standards. Bayern Munich have also been mentioned, per multiple reports, as a potential route back into elite European football.

On the fee, United are understood to be targeting £40m–£50m from any Premier League buyer – broadly consistent with the release clause – while Barcelona, if they return at all, would likely push for a reduced fee or another temporary arrangement. United are not reported to be interested in another loan.

There is also the Bayern angle worth tracking – the detail on Bayern’s reported approach and what it means for Rashford’s market suggests European interest is genuine, even if no formal bid has been submitted.

The Verdict

Rashford’s preference to stay at United is the most surprising element of this story, but preference without leverage is decorative. United’s wage structure, the leadership group’s rejection of Carrick’s proposal, and the club’s explicit pursuit of a permanent sale all point in one direction. He will be back at Carrington after England’s World Cup campaign ends – and then the clock starts ticking properly. A summer sale, domestic or European, is the most likely outcome.

More in Manchester United