- Grealish’s Everton future has generated fresh speculation every week since May
- Reports have ranged from Everton confidence to Manchester City uncertainty
- Multiple journalists and outlets have offered contrasting updates on the deal
If you’ve lost track of the Jack Grealish-to-Everton-permanently saga, don’t worry. There is a decent chance most Evertonians are feeling exactly the same.
Since the start of May, this story has produced enough twists, contradictions and fresh developments to fill an entire transfer window on its own. One report suggests a permanent move is gathering momentum. The next claims Manchester City could have second thoughts. Then another emerges insisting David Moyes remains keen.
So, in the interests of helping supporters keep up, Read Everton has gone back through the story from the beginning.
May 3: The first signs the story was not going away
One of the earliest indications came when former Premier League scout Mick Brown of Football Insider suggested Everton remained interested in keeping Grealish despite concerns surrounding injuries and finances. At that point, a permanent deal felt ambitious – but it was no longer being dismissed outright. For supporters, it was the first sign that Grealish’s future could become one of the major talking points of the summer.
May 11: The £50m obstacle emerges
The next significant development came when it was reported that Everton were unlikely to activate the £50m purchase option attached to Grealish’s loan agreement. That didn’t mean a deal was dead — it meant Everton’s preference would be to negotiate different terms with Manchester City rather than walk away entirely. The first reminder, for supporters, that money would probably decide everything.
May 18: Moyes makes his feelings clear
Several Everton-focused outlets reported that Moyes was enthusiastic about the possibility of keeping Grealish. That mattered because the conversation shifted from whether Everton could afford him to whether the manager genuinely wanted him as part of his plans. The answer, increasingly, appeared to be yes. After helping Everton through a comfortable Premier League campaign, Moyes reportedly saw Grealish as someone capable of bringing creativity and experience to his squad long-term.
May 27: Manchester City complicate things
Just when optimism was building, Football Insider reported that incoming City boss Enzo Maresca wanted to talk with Grealish before any final decision was made. Up until then, the assumption had largely been that City would be willing sellers. Suddenly, there was uncertainty – and Everton’s hopes depended not only on finances, but on what a new manager thought about a player he hadn’t worked with yet.
Late May: Romano adds a note of caution
Fabrizio Romano reinforced the idea that City remained the key decision-makers in the process, suggesting they had not reached a final decision on Grealish’s future. For Evertonians hoping for a quick resolution, it was not what they wanted to hear.
Early June: Grealish wants to stay
Reports from The Hard Tackle then added another layer. The outlet claimed Grealish would be open to remaining at Everton after enjoying his football again under Moyes – arguably the most encouraging update supporters had received. Transfer negotiations become considerably easier when the player himself is pointing in one direction.
June 7: The Finch Farm Insta detectives
Evertonians spotted images suggesting Grealish had been training at Finch Farm despite his future remaining unresolved. Whether it meant anything concrete was still open to interpretation – but it generated another wave of speculation and ensured the story stayed in the headlines.
The Maresca U-turn that changed the picture
Then came the development that genuinely moved things on. The i Paper reported on June 4 that Maresca – despite his earlier interest in holding talks with Grealish – is now unlikely to stand in the player’s way if he wants to leave.
The fear, when Maresca’s appointment was announced, was that a new manager might complicate everything by wanting to assess his inherited squad before sanctioning departures. That complication appears to have been removed.
Following that came the clearest signal yet from Grealish himself. Football Insider’s Pete O’Rourke reported that the player remains firmly keen on a permanent move to Everton despite Maresca offering him a lifeline at the Etihad.
Grealish is reportedly prepared to hear what City’s new manager has to say – but his preference is still to leave. At 30, with regular football the priority, he has no appetite for another season on the fringes of a squad being rebuilt without him.
Where things stand right now
The loan expires June 30. Everton want him for around £20m. The Athletic value him at somewhere between £16m and £21m, which puts both numbers in the same postcode. City are no longer blocking anything.
The fee should be doable. The wages – reportedly £300,000 a week at City – will need to come down significantly, and that is the conversation that needs to happen. But for the first time across this entire saga, all three parties are facing the same direction.
Seventeen days left. Get it done.
Updated by Gary Gowers — 13 June 2026, 8:30am








