The 29-year-old carries an injury record that has undermined his last two seasons in Turin. Despite holding a contract until 2029 and a gross salary of €5.5m plus incentives, Juventus's failure to reach the Champions League has shifted the internal calculus around which players the club must retain at all costs and which they can consider selling to generate transfer funds.
Bremer no longer falls in the first category. Schira reports that the Brazilian has lost the protected status he held after arriving from Torino for €41m in 2022, and that Premier League interest also exists alongside Bayern Munich's attention.
The release clause window runs from July 1 to August 10, creating a defined period during which any club meeting the asking price can extract him from Juventus's squad without protracted negotiation. Bayern have their own defensive needs this summer following uncertainty at centre-back, though they are also pursuing other options in the same position.
Whether Juventus would welcome a Bremer exit or simply accept it if the clause is triggered will depend on whether replacement funds can be deployed quickly enough to address the gap — a calculation made more difficult by the loss of Champions League income.
