Manchester United have named their price for Jadon Sancho

Jadon Sancho signed for Manchester United from Borussia Dortmund in a deal worth £73 million, arriving with sky-high expectations after his phenomenal performances in Germany. He was meant to light up Old Trafford—but things haven’t exactly gone to plan.
After struggling for form and falling out with then-manager Erik ten Hag, Sancho was exiled from the squad and sent back to Dortmund on loan for the second half of the 2023/24 season. While he showed flashes of his old brilliance, it wasn’t enough for the Bundesliga club to trigger a permanent deal.
Sancho then spent the entire 2024/25 season on loan at Chelsea. There, he showed promise again—albeit inconsistently—finishing the campaign with five goals and ten assists, including one in the Europa Conference League final as the Blues beat Real Betis.
Chelsea were keen to make the move permanent, but with Sancho unwilling to take a pay cut from his reported £300,000-a-week salary, the deal collapsed. Now, he finds himself back at United, but with no future in Ruben Amorim’s plans.
United Name Sancho Price

Despite the uncertainty, Sancho is not short of suitors this summer.
According to multiple reports, the 25-year-old is attracting serious interest from clubs across Europe—most notably Juventus. The Italian giants are actively exploring a move, and according to Corriere dello Sport, Manchester United have set their asking price at £25 million.
That figure is £10 million lower than the purchase clause Chelsea had as part of their loan deal last season. It remains to be seen whether Juventus are willing to meet that valuation.
One major boost for the 36-time Italian champions, according to Eurosport Italia, is that Sancho is now open to lowering his wage demands to make the move happen—unlike in talks with Chelsea. That will be music to the ears of the Juventus board, who are reportedly keen on getting the deal done.
With the summer window ticking on and Sancho stuck in limbo, the winger may finally be ready to compromise in order to get his career back on track—or at least build on the momentum he started to recover in west London.
If he doesn’t, he risks watching his prime years drift by from the sidelines.
