90min
·5 May 2025
How Liverpool failed to agree new Trent Alexander-Arnold contract extension

90min
·5 May 2025
Trent Alexander-Arnold is reported to have turned down a new Liverpool contract that would have come with a "significant" pay rise, underlining that money wasn't the motivating factor behind his decision to leave Anfield this summer.
After months of speculation and a growing expectation that he would be moving on, Alexander-Arnold's imminent exit from Liverpool has been confirmed. The next step in the drawn-out saga will likely see him join Real Madrid as a free agent at the start of July.
Liverpool had unsurprisingly wanted to keep Alexander-Arnold, who had created a reputation as one of the best full-backs in world football during nine years as a first-team player.
But while they were successful with lucrative contract offers to Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, who are at a very different stage of their career to Alexander-Arnold, the 26-year-old wanted something else.
EPSN writes that the contract on offer from Liverpool would have made Alexander-Arnold, rumoured to currently be earning £180,000 per week, one of the best paid full-backs in the world.
But multiple reports have explained how Alexander-Arnold requested a face-to-face meeting with Arne Slot during the March international break to respectfully inform the Liverpool boss of his decision to leave the club at the end of his current deal.
Alexander-Arnold wanted to tell Arne Slot face to face / DARREN STAPLES/GettyImages
The Telegraph notes that other events at Liverpool left Alexander-Arnold feeling as though "his situation was being parked". In the summer of 2023, two years on from his most recent new deal and when talks were expected, it is suggested he would have signed an extension.
But with Jurgen Klopp considering his own future and Liverpool burning through sporting directors, the issue was allowed to drift. The player supposedly grew "increasingly twitchy" and everything remained unclear as Klopp announced his decision to leave long before a successor was lined up. By the time sporting director Richard Hughes arrived last summer, Alexander-Arnold was already aware of other options and wanted to "give serious thought" to Madrid's interest.
The opportunity of a huge new challenge, which Alexander-Arnold has publicly outlined himself as the primary reason for leaving Liverpool, was enough to convince him to go.
At the point, as The Athletic explains, financial incentives were not the "motivating factor" and "another £5m a year would have changed nothing" in terms of convincing him to stay.
Alexander-Arnold is ultimately set to get a pay rise when he makes the switch to Real Madrid in July, around an estimated £3.2m (€4m) more each season, but it won't challenge the Spanish club's top earners; Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior and close friend Jude Bellingham. And if the promise of more money didn't keep him at Liverpool, it wasn't what drove him to choose Madrid either, because he could have stayed put in comfortable surroundings to achieve a similar financial outcome.