Kylian Mbappé and Ilkay Gündogan, who have joined Real Madrid and Manchester City on free transfers, are the biggest-name movers.
Unless something drastic happens in the last few hours of the summer 2024 transfer window, Kylian Mbappé's long-awaited switch from Paris-Germain to Real Madrid will undoubtedly go down as the biggest move, in terms of its impact if not in terms of value.
The France captain famously refused to sign a new contract with the Ligue 1 champions, allowing the 15-time European champions to get one of the world’s biggest superstars on a free transfer (his wages aren’t cheap, however…).
Gündogan makes way for Olmo at Barcelona
One of the window’s other big-name transfers also involved no money changing hands, between the buying and selling clubs, at least. Ilkay Gündogan returned to Manchester City after only a year with Barcelona, party as a result of the Catalans’ well-documented financial issues.
Barça moved Gündogan on to facilitate the registration of their own headline summer signing, Dani Olmo. The Euro 2024 winner, who spent seven years at La Masia until 2014, agreed a €55 million ($60.95 million) transfer from RB Leipzig but missed his new club’s first two league games of the season due to them being over their spending limit imposed by LaLiga. A (temporary) solution has been found.
Big Premier League incomings and outgoings
Premier League clubs have inevitably been the biggest overall spenders, with Dominic Solanke (Bournemouth to Spurs), Pedro Neto (Wolves to Chelsea), Leny Yoro (Lille to Manchester United), Amadou Onana (Everton to Aston Villa), João Félix (Atlético Madrid to Chelsea), Riccardo Calafiori (Bologna to Arsenal), Georginio Rutter (Leeds United to Brighton), Max Kilman (Wolves to West Ham) and Matthijs De Ligt (Bayern Munich to Manchester United) all moving for in excess of €45 million ($49.87 million).
However, there have also been plenty of big-money moves away from England, as Premier League clubs attempt to balance the books in terms of Financial Fair Play. That includes the most expensive one of all, with Manchester City’s Julián Álvarez joining Atlético Madrid in a deal initially worth €75 million ($83.1 million)
Moussa Diaby (Aston Villa to Al-Itiihad), Michael Olise (Crystal Palace to Bayern Munich), Douglas Luiz (Aston Villa to Juventus), João Palhinha (Fulham to Bayern Munich), Conor Gallagher (Chelsea to Atlético Madrid) and Romelu Lukaku (Chelsea to Napoli) have also left the English top flight for initial fees in excess of €30 million ($33.24 million) this summer.
Summer 2024 transfer window biggest moves
Julián Álvarez - Manchester City to Atlético Madrid - €75 million / $83.11 million
Dominic Solanke - Bournemouth to Spurs - €64.3 million / $71.25 million
Leny Yoro - Lille to Manchester United - €62 million / $68.7 million
Pedro Neto - Wolces to Chelsea - €60 million / $66.49 million
Moussa Diaby - Aston Villa to Al-Ittihad - €60 million / $66.49 million
João Neves - Benfica to PSG - €59.92 million / $66.4 million
Amadou Onana - Everton to Aston Villa - €59.35 million / $65.77 million
Dani Olmo - RB Leipzig to Barcelona - €55 million / $60.95 million
Teun Koopmeiners - Atalanta to Juventus - €54.7 million / $60.62 million
Michael Olise - Crystal Palace to Bayern Munich - €53 million / $58.73 million
João Félix - Atlético Madrid to Chelsea - €52 million / $57.62 million
Douglas Luiz - Aston Villa to Juventus - €51.5 million / $57.07 million
João Palhinha - Fulham to Bayern Munich - €51 million / $56.52 million
Désiré Doué - Rennes to PSG - €50 million / $55.41 million
Endrick - Palmeiras to Real Madrid - €47.5 million / $52.64 million
Max Kilman - Wolves to West Ham - €47.5 million / $52.64 million
Georginio Rutter - Leeds to Brighton - €46.7 million / $51.75 million
Matthijs de Ligt - Bayern Munich to Manchester United - €45 million / $49.87 million
Riccardo Calafiori - Bologna to Arsenal - €45 million / $49.87 million
Ian Maatsen - Chelsea to Aston Villa - €44.5 million / $49.31 million
Joshua Zirkzee - Bologna to Manchester United - €42.5 million / $47.1 million
Conor Gallagher - Chelsea to Atlético Madrid - €42 million / $46.54 million
Robin Le Normand - Real Sociedad to Atlético Madrid - €34.5 million / $38.23 million
Mikel Merino - Real Sociedad to Arsenal - €32 million / $35.46 million
Alexander Sorloth - Real Sociedad to Atlético Madrid - €32 million / $35.46 million
Emile Smith-Rowe - Arsenal to Fulham - €31.8 million / $35.24 million
Giorgi Mamardashvili - Valencia to Liverpool - €30 million / $33.24 million
Romelu Lukaku - Chelsea to Napoli - €30 million / $33.24 million
Joachim Andersen - Crystal Palace to Fulham - €29.5 million / $32.67 million
Crysencio Summerville - Leeds to West Ham - €29.3 million / $32.47 million
Nicklas Füllkrug - Borussia Dortmund to West Ham - €27 million / $29.92 million
Mason Greenwood - Manchester United to Marseille - €26 million / $28.81 million
Savinho - Troyes to Manchester City - €25 million / $27.7 million
João Cancelo - Manchester City to Al-Hilal - €25 million / $27.7 million
Fábio Carvalho - Liverpool to Brentford - €23.4 million / $25.93 million
Khéphren Thuram - Nice to Juventus - €20.6 million / $22.83 million
Youssouf Fofana - Monaco to AC Milan - €20 million / $22.16 million
Thiago Almada - Atlanta United to Botafogo - €19.5 million / $21.61 million
Álvaro Morata - Atlético Madrid to AC Milan - €13 million / $14.41 million
Federico Chiesa - Juventus to Liverpool - €12 million / $13.3 million
Hirving Lozano - PSV Eindhoven to San Diego FC - €12 million / $13.3 million
Ilkay Gündogan - Barcelona to Manchester City - free
Kylian Mbappé - PSG to Real Madrid - free
When does the 2024 summer transfer window close in Europe?
The transfer window closes in most countries on Friday, August 30, although the times vary across different European nations.
Germany’s Bundesliga will be the first market to close, with the deadline at 2 p.m E.T. The next competition to slam shut will be Ligue 1, with the deadline scheduled for 5 p.m. E.T. LaLiga, the Premier League and Serie A will all close their respective markets at 6 p.m E.T.
In the Premier League’s case, clubs trying to close a last-minute agreement with a player can sign a “deal sheet.” This document allows English teams to submit full paperwork until two hours after the deadline (8 p.m. E.T.). The agreement must be signed and sent to the Premier League before 6 p.m. E.T. Otherwise, they cannot take advantage of this additional time.