
- Foden poised to sign a new Manchester City deal running to 2030
- Four-year contract plus option, despite recent dip and loss of starting spot
- 365 games, 110 goals, and a bulging trophy cabinet underline City’s faith
Manchester City are set to lock in Phil Foden on a long-term deal that keeps the England international at the Etihad until 2030, after a provisional agreement with the Carabao Cup winners. With his current contract expiring next summer, Foden is expected to sign a four-year contract with an optional extra year—a firm statement that the club still believes he is central to their future.
It’s a move that will raise eyebrows and, for those who track the market like they do on the best football betting sites, this feels like a proper signal. Yes, Foden’s form has dipped during a tricky 2026 and he’s lost his starting spot at times, but City aren’t about to let a blue-chip academy product walk away.
Why City Are Backing Their Homegrown Star
Foden has been City through and through since the under-nines, and the numbers still pop: 365 appearances, 110 goals, and a medal haul that includes six Premier League titles, five League Cups, two FA Cups, and the 2023 Champions League. In 2023–24 he hit a career-best 27 goals and was named Footballer of the Year and PFA Player of the Year. That pedigree doesn’t vanish overnight.
True, the last two seasons have tested him. After a purple patch—six in five in autumn—Foden hasn’t scored in his last 25 City games. Confidence has clearly taken a knock, but the club’s stance is clear: you don’t discard elite talent at 25; you double down and rebuild around it. This contract is as much about protecting value as it is about backing a player who can still decide big matches.
What It Means For City’s Next Cycle
With captain Bernardo Silva and defender John Stones set to depart in the summer, tying down Foden helps anchor the dressing room. He’ll join a growing core contracted deep into the 2030s, including Erling Haaland, Gianluigi Donnarumma, Nico O’Reilly, Marc Guehi, Antoine Semenyo and Rayan Cherki. That’s long-term planning, City-style—stack the deck with peak-age talent and let the trophies follow.
Bottom line: form is temporary, class is permanent. If City get Foden back to his best, this deal will look like a bargain and the Etihad will have its local talisman leading the charge again.
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