Bisiwu, 18, has caught the eye of the Spanish champions but the two clubs remain far apart on valuation. Barcelona's sporting department is keeping a close watch on any shift in Brugge's position and is prepared to return with an offer when conditions are more favourable.
The plan, should a deal eventually be reached, would be for Bisiwu to join Barcelona Atlètic first rather than going straight into the first team — a development pathway consistent with the club's approach to young signings. Sources close to the player's camp indicate he would welcome the opportunity to join Barcelona.
Bisiwu's emergence has attracted significant attention, and Barcelona view him as a player who fits their long-term recruitment policy of acquiring young, high-potential forwards who can be developed within the club's system before stepping up.
The fee issue remains the central obstacle. Until Brugge lower their demands or Barcelona raise their offer substantially, the transfer will stay in a holding pattern. The club's sporting direction is monitoring the situation with patience rather than urgency, prepared to act if circumstances change but unwilling to overpay at this stage of the player's development.
Barcelona's interest in Bisiwu fits a broader pattern of tracking elite Belgian youth talent before the market around them inflates. The club have seen comparable situations resolve in their favour when patience and persistence have been applied, though Brugge's determination to hold firm on their asking price suggests this will not be a quick or simple negotiation.
In the meantime, Bisiwu continues his development at Brugge, where he has already demonstrated the kind of quality that would justify a move to one of Europe's biggest clubs at some point in the near future. For Barcelona, the question is whether they can make that moment happen on terms that work for them.
