At a glance
- Early 2027 remains the realistic return window for Rodrygo despite the encouraging signs
- Rodrygo’s rehabilitation is advancing more positively than initial forecasts suggested
- Real Madrid are maintaining a cautious, no-shortcuts approach inside Valdebebas
Real Madrid hold firm on a 2027 Rodrygo return
There is finally a reason for cautious optimism around Rodrygo. After an injury that initially painted a long and difficult road ahead, internal feeling at Real Madrid has started to shift. According to Diario AS, the Brazilian forward is responding well to treatment, and early signs suggest his rehabilitation is tracking in the right direction – better than expected, though not yet enough to change the bigger picture.
Why Real Madrid won’t rush Rodrygo back before 2027
Inside Valdebebas, the message is clear and consistent: no shortcuts, no pressure, no premature return. Despite the encouraging progress, the club is determined to protect Rodrygo from any risk of relapse. Injuries of this severity don’t just require recovery – they require certainty. And until that certainty exists, Real Madrid will not move.
The timeline still points to early 2027
When the injury first occurred, the initial estimate was brutal: ten to twelve months out. That projection hasn’t changed. Even with positive developments in recent weeks, early 2027 remains the most realistic window for a return to the pitch. Anything sooner would depend on a near-perfect recovery – physically and mentally. At this level, almost ready is simply not enough.
What Rodrygo’s absence costs Real Madrid
His injury is more than a missing player. Rodrygo offers a profile that few can replicate – mobility, unpredictability, the ability to connect different phases of attack. Replacing that is not a question of squad depth alone. It is a structural challenge, which is precisely why the club is thinking in the long term: not just about getting him back, but about getting him back right.
The path forward is patience, not urgency
There is always temptation in football to accelerate timelines, to bring stars back early, to gamble on fitness. Real Madrid are choosing the opposite path. A rushed return could cost the club far more than waiting a few additional months. Rodrygo’s recovery is moving forward – that much is clear. The challenge now is staying disciplined enough to let that progress run its full course.
When he returns, Rodrygo will face positional rivalry on the right from Arda Guler, Franco Mastantuono and possibly Endrick.



