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Enzo Fernandez ready to sign five-year Real Madrid deal in Chelsea twist

Enzo Fernandez ready to sign five-year Real Madrid deal

Enzo Fernandez contemplating move to Real Madrid from Chelsea in dramatic training portrait

Enzo Fernandez is reportedly ready to sign a five-year contract with Real Madrid, with Spanish media claiming a personal agreement is already in place between the player and the club – and the only thing standing between him and the Bernabéu is Chelsea’s €138 million asking price. This is not vague transfer noise. According to multiple Spanish outlets, the Argentine has made his intentions clear, his agent has shaken hands with Madrid, and the deal structure is already being mapped out. The question now is purely whether Chelsea blink.

What Spanish Media Are Reporting – and Why It Matters

Spanish journalist Miguel Serrano was unambiguous in his reporting: “Real Madrid have reached an agreement with Enzo Fernandez.” He was careful to clarify the limits of that claim, adding that “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 is not speculation about a player’s vague ambitions – that is a named journalist, naming an agent, describing a concluded personal agreement.

Spanish outlet El Debate went further, stating: “Enzo Fernandez is the expected target. He has no problem signing a five-year contract with Real Madrid. There’s no significant disagreement about the money. The dilemma is finalising the transfer with Chelsea.” The five-year contract length is the specific new detail this latest wave of reporting adds to the saga – and it signals a level of commitment from Fernandez that goes well beyond exploratory interest. As we covered when Real Madrid first reached a personal terms agreement with Fernandez, the player’s side has been the easier half of this equation from the start.

The Mourinho Factor – and Why the 2026 Timeline Is Real

The summer 2026 target date is not arbitrary. TEAMtalk’s transfer insider Graeme Bailey reports that Jose Mourinho is keen on landing Fernandez as part of his rebuild – and Mourinho returns to Real Madrid as manager for a second time if Florentino Perez wins the presidential elections this weekend. Perez himself has reportedly been dropping hints, with Serrano adding that “when Florentino says that people know the best players want to play for Real Madrid, they tell me he’s referring to Enzo Fernandez and someone else too.” That is a president publicly previewing a transfer he believes is coming.

Fernandez fits the Mourinho profile precisely – a combative, box-to-box midfielder with two major international trophies already on his CV. The 25-year-old won the 2022 FIFA World Cup and the 2024 Copa America with Argentina, and he is entering what should be the peak years of his career. Madrid want him before those years are spent. Fernandez, it seems, wants the same thing. Real Madrid have identified him as part of a broader Premier League recruitment push, and you can see exactly where he fits within Real Madrid’s wider Premier League transfer targets and budget planning.

Chelsea’s Position – The €138 Million Problem

Here is where the story has genuine teeth. Chelsea are demanding €138 million – roughly £119.2 million – for a player they paid £107 million to Benfica for in January 2023. They are not selling at a loss, and they are under no contractual pressure to do so: Fernandez is tied to Stamford Bridge until 2032. That nine-year contract gives Chelsea enormous leverage, and they know it.

The financial context matters here too. Chelsea’s record pre-tax losses and ongoing PSR compliance pressures mean that any sale needs to land at a figure that genuinely moves the needle – a cut-price deal does nothing for them. Real Madrid’s response to the fee obstacle, per TEAMtalk, is a player-plus-cash structure. Aurelien Tchouameni and Eduardo Camavinga are the senior names being floated as potential makeweights. Younger options include Jacobo Ramon, currently on loan at Como, and Chema Andres, at VfB Stuttgart – both of whom Madrid hold buy-back options on, meaning Los Blancos could trigger those clauses and immediately redirect the players to Chelsea as part of the package.

The Verdict – What Happens Next

The player is ready. The personal terms are done. The five-year contract is agreed in principle. What is not done – and what will define whether this transfer actually happens – is whether Real Madrid can construct a package that Chelsea find genuinely compelling rather than a convenient way to offload players they no longer need. Tchouameni and Camavinga would certainly be of interest in west London, but Chelsea will want to know the cash component is not being gutted to fund the inclusion of those names.

Chelsea hold the leverage here, and they know it. If Madrid want Fernandez badly enough, they will have to pay Chelsea’s price – either in cash or in a swap package that genuinely reflects €138 million in value. The deal is real. Getting it over the line is another matter entirely.

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