In a move that has been brewing for months, Napoli have made it crystal clear: Rasmus Hojlund is staying put at the Stadio Maradona, and Manchester United are set to pocket a tidy €50 million fee for the Danish striker.
The writing has been on the wall since December 2025, when Napoli director Giovanni Manna first hinted that Hojlund's loan move from Old Trafford would become permanent. "It's just a formality," Manna stated back then, and he doubled down on that stance in March 2026 during an interview with Sky Sport Italia. While the club has an obligation to buy if they qualify for the Champions League, Manna suggested they'd trigger the clause regardless of their final league position—a testament to how highly they rate the 23-year-old.
So, what's the financial breakdown? Napoli have already paid €6 million for the season-long loan, and they'll fork out an additional €44 million to make the deal permanent. That brings the total to €50 million—a solid return for a player who has found his rhythm in Serie A.
Hojlund has been a key figure for the Partenopei this season, netting 14 goals in 41 appearances across all competitions. His contributions have helped Napoli climb to second place in the Serie A table, holding a six-point cushion over fifth-placed Roma with just three games left to play. With Champions League qualification virtually secured, all signs point to Hojlund calling Naples home for the foreseeable future.
For Manchester United, this is a clean exit—a loan-turned-permanent that delivers a substantial fee without any lingering uncertainty. For Napoli, it's a statement of intent: they've found their man, and they're not letting him go.
