Transfer expert Fabrizio Romano confirmed that a "real negotiation" is taking place between Alisson's representatives and Juventus, with the Turin club prepared to offer a contract until 2028 with an additional year's option.
Juventus are also reported to be willing to include goalkeeper Michele Di Gregorio in a swap arrangement, a move that would give Liverpool an immediate replacement rather than relying entirely on Giorgi Mamardashvili to step up.
Alisson has been first choice at Liverpool since joining from Roma for Β£67 million in 2018 and has made 332 appearances, keeping 128 clean sheets. This season, however, has been significantly disrupted by injury.
A recurring hamstring problem has kept him out for extended periods, with Mamardashvili β signed last summer for Β£29 million β making 18 appearances in his absence. Liverpool triggered a one-year extension clause in March, binding Alisson until 2027, primarily to preserve his transfer value.
Head coach Arne Slot was asked about the prospect of losing the Brazilian in the same window as Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson.
"I think the club is run in a certain way and we make decisions that the club thinks are in the best interests of the club. The history of all the transfers shows that nothing was done without a purpose or without thinking about it. Experience is definitely one argument to keep him, but there are other arguments."
When asked about Juventus's interest specifically, Slot was careful to redirect.
"The main focus for Ali is very clear β that is getting back in goal as soon as possible for the club he loves to play for, and then he wants to be in goal for the country he wants to play for, Brazil. I think that is already the short and mid-term future."
Alisson is understood to want to leave Liverpool as a legend rather than forcing a departure, which means a deal requires the club's approval. Romano has been clear that this is not a situation where the player is agitating for a move but one where both parties are navigating the transition with care.
Mamardashvili's suitability as the long-term number one remains a point of debate inside the club. He has impressed in terms of shot-stopping but his ball-playing ability β a cornerstone of Liverpool's build-up style under both JΓΌrgen Klopp and Slot β has attracted scrutiny from coaching staff and supporters alike. A Di Gregorio swap, giving Liverpool an experienced Italian international to bridge the development gap, could resolve that concern in the short term.
Liverpool face Chelsea on Saturday with Champions League qualification still mathematically not confirmed.