Atlético Madrid Tells Real Madrid to Pay the €500m Release Clause After Rejecting £129m Bid for Julián Álvarez

julián álvarez

Florentino Pérez promised a Galáctico. Atlético responded with laughing emojis.

Just 48 hours after winning re-election as Real Madrid president, Florentino Pérez made good on his promise to deliver a blockbuster summer signing, or at least tried to. On Tuesday, June 9, 2026, Real Madrid officially announced a £129m (€150m) offer for Atlético Madrid striker Julián Álvarez. Atlético’s reply came in minutes: five laughing emojis on X, and a public statement that was less press release, more roast.

Real Madrid took the unusual step of publishing an official statement confirming the bid themselves. It read: “Real Madrid C.F. announces that, following the meeting of the Board of Directors held today, it has made an offer of €150 million to Club Atlético de Madrid for the federative rights of the player Julián Álvarez.”

The statement also confirmed Atlético’s rejection, noting the club “expressed gratitude for the proposal, made within the framework of good relations between both clubs, and rejected it, referring to the player’s release clause.”

That release clause? A staggering €500 million, roughly £431m. Álvarez is under contract until 2030, and Atlético have absolutely no intention of discussing anything below that figure.

Atlético’s Response Was Something Else

Most clubs would issue a polite rejection and move on. Atlético Madrid are not most clubs.

Within minutes of Real’s statement going live, the Rojiblancos retweeted it with five laughing face emojis. Then came the formal statement, framed as a numbered list of “clarifications”:

“You must have confused education with gratitude, but to leave no doubt: we don’t thank you for anything.”

“We neither study nor consider any offer for Julián. How could we not get along when you make us laugh even more than Barcelona.”

And a pointed postscript aimed at Real’s youth recruitment practices:

“P.S. Taking advantage of the good relationship with your new president, let’s see if you stop ‘stealing’ players from our Academy. Thanks a lot, @realmadrid!”

The reference to the Pope being an Atlético fan was also in there. This was not a standard press release.

Atlético Madrid
Atlético Madrid Tweet

Who Is Julián Álvarez and Why Does Everyone Want Him?

The 26-year-old Argentine joined Atlético from Manchester City in the summer of 2024 for around £82m, a move that raised eyebrows at the time, given City’s reluctance to sell. Since then, he’s answered every question. In two seasons at the Metropolitano, Álvarez has scored 49 goals in 106 appearances, including 20 goals in 49 matches this past campaign.

He was a World Cup winner with Argentina in 2022. He was key to Diego Simeone’s attack as Atlético reached the Champions League semi-finals this season, where they were eventually knocked out by Arsenal. At 26, with his best years arguably still ahead, he is exactly the kind of forward that Barcelona, Real Madrid, and Arsenal would queue up to sign.

The problem, if you’re a buyer, is that Atlético knew exactly what they were getting when they built that release clause. €500m is not an accident. It’s a message.

Julián Álvarez’s Release Clause: What Is It and Can Anyone Pay It?

Álvarez’s contract with Atlético Madrid includes a €500 million (£431m) release clause, one of the largest ever inserted into a player’s contract in European football. It functions as a hard wall: Atlético don’t have to negotiate, doesn’t have to respond to bids, and doesn’t have to justify the figure to anyone. If you want Álvarez, you trigger the clause. Full stop.

Real Madrid’s £129m offer wasn’t even a third of that. Barcelona’s earlier bid of €100m, rejected on May 29, was less than a quarter.

The practicalities of triggering a €500m clause are almost impossible for any club in world football right now. Real Madrid already have Vinícius Jr. and Kylian Mbappé as their primary attacking options. There’s no clear sporting case that forces their hand. Barcelona’s financial position makes it even harder for them, despite reportedly being Álvarez’s preferred destination. Sources have linked him to a lifelong admiration for the club and a desire to follow in Lionel Messi’s footsteps at Camp Nou.

Unless someone triggers that clause, Álvarez stays. And Atlético know it.

This saga needs some political backdrop to make full sense. Pérez won Real Madrid’s presidential election on June 7, securing 65% of the vote and extending his term until 2030. Before the election, he made a specific promise to fans: if re-elected, he would immediately pursue a Galáctico-level signing.

His election rival, Enrique Riquelme, had promised to sign Erling Haaland, going as far as unveiling a shirt with Haaland’s name on it, a move that reportedly prompted Manchester City to consider legal action. Pérez went with something more measured: a formal bid for a player his club can realistically watch play every week in La Liga.

Álvarez was the name. The bid was made public. And Atlético, who have now seen off Barcelona’s approach and Real’s, treated it as an opportunity for some very public theatre.

Barcelona, Arsenal, and What Comes Next

Reports suggest Álvarez privately wants to leave Atlético this summer, with Barcelona understood to be his first choice. But the Argentine has so far refused to push publicly for a move, and without that push, Atlético have no obligation to engage.

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta also holds genuine interest in Álvarez, and the north London club has been monitoring the situation closely. Whether any club makes a more serious run at the €500m clause remains to be seen. Most analysts expect the window to pass without a deal.

Atlético Madrid tweets to Barcelona

Álvarez is also targeting fitness for the 2026 FIFA World Cup after recovering from an ankle injury, and he’s reportedly undergoing specialist regenerative treatment to ensure he’s ready for Argentina. A transfer saga that distracts from that preparation is not in his interests right now either.

For now, he’s an Atlético Madrid player. With a contract until 2030. And a release clause that makes Real Madrid’s record-breaking offer look like an opening lowball.

Quick Facts: Julián Álvarez at Atlético Madrid

  • Age: 26
  • Nationality: Argentine
  • Goals at Atlético: 49 in 106 appearances
  • Contract expires: 2030
  • Release clause: €500m (£431m)
  • Transfer fee from Man City (2024): ~£82m
  • Goals this season: 20 in 49 matches
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