The rumors are now reality. As of Tuesday, May 12, 2026, Sergio Ramos has reached a total agreement to acquire a majority stake in Sevilla FC, effectively becoming the new owner of his boyhood club.

The deal, valued at approximately €400–€450 million (including the absorption of the club’s significant debt), marks the end of a multi-month negotiation process that accelerated following an intense eight-hour summit in Seville on Monday.
The Details of the Takeover
- The Consortium: While Ramos is the public face and a major shareholder, the bid is backed by the international investment firm Five Eleven Capital and a group of American investors.
- The Inner Circle: Sergio’s brother and longtime agent, René Ramos, has been the primary architect of the “René Process,” leading the legal and financial negotiations alongside specialized lawyers to ensure a stable institutional transition.
- The Sellers: The agreement involves the exit of long-standing power players including José Castro, the Carrión family, and Carolina Alés. Crucially, majority shareholder José María del Nido Benavente has also reportedly agreed to offload his stake.
- The Final Steps: The deal is described as “sealed,” with only the final “papeleo” (paperwork) and legal clauses remaining. An official club statement is expected by Wednesday or Thursday.
A Rescue Mission for “Los Nervionenses”
Ramos takes over at the most critical juncture in Sevilla’s modern history.
The club has been reeling from a financial freefall, with revenues dropping nearly 50% since 2023 and a wage-to-revenue ratio that hit a staggering 99%.
Having all but secured their La Liga status for next season, the club now shifts from “survival mode” to the “Ramos Project,” which aims to:
- Restructure Debt: Use the new capital injection to settle urgent obligations and raise the La Liga-imposed salary cap.
- Restore Identity: Leverage Ramos’s legendary status to attract talent and rebuild the academy system that produced him two decades ago.
- The “Player-President” Question: While Ramos is currently a free agent (having left Monterrey in December 2025), there is intense speculation that he could become a player-president, registered to play for the 2026/27 season while simultaneously leading the board.
René Ramos: The Man Behind the Curtain
René’s role cannot be overstated. Beyond just being a “brother,” he has spent the last six months conducting a rigorous due-diligence process to uncover the true scale of Sevilla’s financial distress.
By bringing in international backing while keeping a local, family-oriented leadership structure, the Ramos brothers have presented a plan that has finally unified a fractured shareholder group.
With the “Camero” finally taking control of the club that made him, do you think Sergio Ramos should hang up his boots to focus entirely on the massive financial rebuild, or could his presence on the pitch be exactly what Sevilla needs to restore their winning DNA next season?