When a club like Bayern Munich looks into the mirror ahead of a transfer window, it must ask a hard question: who should Bayern Munich sell to re-balance the squad, free up wages, and invest for the future? At EquaGoal, we dive deep into Bayern’s current roster, contract situations, market value, and performance to propose which departures make the most sense—without weakening the team’s core.

Here’s the stage: under Vincent Kompany, Bayern have a mix of established stars, talented youngsters, and expensive squad players. Some fringe names barely play, others are aging, and a few have contracts that demand either a renewal at high cost or a sale. Below, EquaGoal analyzes the top candidates Bayern should consider offloading, the pros and cons, and what the club must guard against when executing these moves.

Table of Contents

What Bayern Need, it’s worth clarifying Bayern’s strategic needs in the next window:

What Bayern Need, it’s worth clarifying Bayern’s strategic needs in the next window:
  • Wage structure relief: Some players earn high salaries relative to their contribution. Moving them opens room for reinvestment.
  • Playing time clarity: Some squad members are stuck behind others and face stagnation. Selling gives them a path and avoids frustration.
  • Contract risk mitigation: Players in the final year(s) or resisting renewal could end up walking for free.
  • Balance & depth: Bayern can’t sacrifice depth, but selling less essential personnel is a logical step.

With that in mind, here are the strongest candidate sales for Bayern Munich—and some caveats.

Top Candidates Who Should Bayern Sell

Top Candidates Who Should Bayern Sell

Below are the players who, at least on pa. We’ll examine their situation, rationale for selling, and possible downsides.

Kingsley Coman

Coman has been a Bayern fixture, but injury woes and contract wrangling have limited his consistency. Reports suggest that Bayern are open to offers. His wage demands and recurring fitness issues make him a logical departure to free up space on the flank.

Pros of selling Coman:

  • Frees a slot for a younger, more dependable wide attacker
  • Eases wage burden Reduces risk of losing him for nothing later

Risks / caveats:

  • His experience and match-winning capability in flashes
  • Lack of proven backup with similar upside

João Palhinha

Palhinha was brought in as a stabilizing midfield presence, but he has rarely featured and remains behind Bayern’s preferred midfield starters. His contract runs until 2028, but his playing time is minimal.

Moving him would free wages and a roster spot. However, Bayern would need to ensure depth in the defensive-mid role remains solid.

Daniel Peretz

As a third-choice goalkeeper, Peretz receives limited opportunities behind Manuel Neuer and backups. Several reports suggest a permanent sale is in the cards.

Selling Peretz would be low risk in sporting terms, but Bayern must keep an experienced backup behind Neuer.

Leroy Sané

Sané is another tricky case. On one hand, he has pedigree and Bundesliga experience. On the other hand, his contract situation and the desire by Bayern to reduce his salary make a sale appealing.

If his form or consistency isn’t compelling, letting him go can be justified—but Bayern must ensure wing depth is covered.

Kingsley Coman vs Serge Gnabry

An interesting contrast emerges between the two: while reports indicated that Gnabry was given assurances he won’t be sold, Coman is viewed as more dispensable.

Thus, it seems Bavaria’s management already views Coman more flexibly than Gnabry.

Playersarder to Sell (But Under Pressure)

Playersarder to Sell (But Under Pressure)

Some names are more complicated—either because they are valuable, contractually secure, or core to the plans. But circumstances suggest their situation merits scrutiny.

Dayot Upamecano

Upamecano remains a strong defensive asset. That said, contract renewal discussions are stalling. Bayern might prefer to sell now rather than extend under unpalatable terms.

However, losing him would hurt defensive stability, so only a major offer should tempt Bayern’s hand here.

Kim Min-jae

As one of the center-backs, Kim is less likely to be sold. Yet rumors suggest clubs are preparing big bids—though he reportedly doesn’t want to leave.

If Bayern demand and the player’s will align, a sale might be considered—but not without serious replacements ready.

Harry Kane

Selling Kane is a nonstarter right now. He remains Bayern’s primary attacking weapon, and he has multiple years on his contract. Speculation about a move is always present, but, Kane should stay.

Young talents (Boey, Pavlovic, etc.)

These are less likely to be sold outright. They may earn loans or remain as rotation pieces, but their long-term potential makes Bayern reluctant to part with them.

A Suggested Sale List for 2025

Here is a refined list ofern players who make sense to target for sale, prioritized by feasibility and impact:

Priority Player Position Rationale / Notes
High Kingsley Coman Winger Injuries + salary + fringe status make him a prime candidate
High João Palhinha Defensive Mid Minimal use; frees wage and spot
Medium Daniel Peretz Goalkeeper Backup keeper with low on-field impact
Medium Leroy Sané Winger Contract costs and rotational nature
Low Dayot Upamecano Center-Back Only if contract talks fail or big offer arrives
Low Kim Min-jae Center-Back Strong value but speculation exists

Bayern should aim to sell 3 to 5 of these in one window if possible to generate meaningful funds and roster flexibility.

What Bayern Must Avoid

As Bayern considers who should Bayern Munich sell, they must also sidestep pitfalls:

  • Under-sell talents: Don’t sell in panic; demand fair market value.
  • Vacuum in depth: Selling needs to be balanced with recruitment so the squad isn’t left thin.
  • Late contract leaks: Don’t allow big names like Upamecano to dangle toward free agency.
  • Disrupt chemistry: Avoid mass turnover that destabilizes dressing room culture.

Bayern’s mix of experience and youth requires meticulous handling in the transfer window.

Conclusion

Who should Bayern Munich sell? The strongest candidates are Kingsley Coman, João Palhinha, Daniel Peretz, and possibly Leroy Sané. The club could also entertain offers for Upamecano if contract extension fails. Bayern should resist selling core pillars like Harry Kane or Kim Min-jae unless the deal is exceptional.

At EquaGoal we believe a balanced sale approach—targeting fringe, high-cost, and underused players—will yield fresh resources and reinvestment opportunities without weakening Bayern’s competitive core. If you’d like transfer-market estimates or rumored destinations for each name, just say the word.