Real Madrid place Álvaro Carreras on surplus list, opening door to Premier League suitors
Real Madrid have agreed to sell left-back Álvaro Carreras, with multiple English Premier League clubs circling the Spain Under-21 international ahead of the summer window.

Real Madrid have placed left-back Álvaro Carreras on the club's surplus list and are open to a sale this summer, according to reporting from Mundo Deportivo that Transfermarkt flagged in a Telegram post at 22:28 UTC on 15 June 2026. The decision, framed in Spanish-press shorthand as a clearance of a non-essential asset, makes the 22-year-old Spain Under-21 international one of the more accessible Spanish-market options for Premier League recruiters in the opening weeks of the window.
Carreras has spent recent seasons on loan, including a spell at Benfica where he developed the profile that originally attracted Madrid's recruitment department. With the first-team pecking order at the Santiago Bernabéu settled around Ferland Mendy and Fran García, the club's sporting area has signalled that a permanent exit serves both the player's career arc and the balance sheet.
What the sources say
Mundo Deportivo's reporting, as relayed by Transfermarkt's dedicated English-language channel, describes Carreras as "wanted by several clubs in the English Premier League." The wording is deliberately unattributed — no club is named in the Telegram summary, no fee is published, and no agent is quoted. That matters. Spanish transfer journalism is rarely shy about naming suitors, and the absence of a club tag in this cycle of reporting is itself a tell: Madrid appear to be testing the market rather than entertaining a single agreed offer.
The phrase "agreed to sell" in the same thread is the load-bearing line. It does not mean a deal is in place. It means the selling club has internally approved a departure and will not stand in the way of a reasonable bid. Premier League interest, plural, is the negotiating leverage. Whether that leverage converts into a transfer completed before pre-season tours begin is a separate question entirely.
The Premier League pull
English football's appetite for Spanish-developed full-backs is well established. The pathway runs both ways: Premier League clubs pay a premium for La Liga-mined operators because the league's tactical emphasis on technical defending translates cleanly to the English game, and because the resale maths typically work. For Carreras, who has already accumulated Champions League minutes with Benfica, the case for a Premier League move is straightforward — guaranteed senior football, a higher base salary band, and a stage large enough to keep him in Spain's senior squad conversation ahead of the next international cycle.
For the buying club, the calculus is also familiar. Premier League sides operating under profit and sustainability rules have grown used to structuring deals for young Spanish-market assets that combine an initial loan-to-buy option with sell-on protection. Whether that template fits here depends on Madrid's asking posture, which the public reporting does not yet disclose.
What remains uncertain
Three things are not in the thread context, and this publication will not invent them. First, no specific Premier League club is named as front-runner; the reporting uses "several." Second, no transfer fee, structure, or player wage expectation is published. Third, the player himself has not been quoted, and Madrid's sporting directorate has not issued an institutional statement in the materials available. Until at least one of those data points lands from a primary source — a club announcement, a buyer's sporting director on record, or a named agent — the picture is best read as a market opening, not a market move.
Stakes
For Madrid, a Carreras sale is a low-risk liquidation: a player outside the first-team plan converted into fiscal headroom for the larger summer. For the Premier League suitors, the early-mover advantage is real — Spanish full-backs of this profile rarely stay available past the first week of July. For Carreras, the window that opened on 15 June 2026 is the one in which he decides whether his next chapter is built on minutes, or on a bench with a glossy contract.
Desk note: Monexus is treating the Mundo Deportivo/Transfermarkt dispatch as a market-opening signal, not a confirmed departure. The sources do not name a buyer, a price, or a player's stated preference; the piece is written within those limits.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/transfermarkt/
- https://t.me/transfermarkt/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81lvaro_Carreras