Five first-team players are leaving Inter this summer with their contracts ending, joining Denzel Dumfries — whose move to Real Madrid for a frustratingly low €20m release clause was confirmed last month. It is the largest single-window squad turnover of the Marotta era.
And here is the thing: it should not cause a moment’s panic. Every single departure was not just expected — it was overdue.
The Honest Assessment
Some Inter fans will look at this list and feel nervous. Six departures in one window is a significant number on paper.
In reality, what Inter are doing this summer is something they arguably should have started last summer. The squad had aged. Not badly, not suddenly — but gradually, in the way that all great squads do. Several players were approaching the point where retirement was becoming a more natural conversation than contract renewal.
Having that many players in a squad thinking about the end of their careers makes it genuinely difficult to compete at the highest level. The hunger, the sharpness in training, the ambition in the dressing room — all of it is affected when too many key contributors are in the twilight years.
The rebuild that is happening now will make Inter better. Not just different — better.
1. Yann Sommer — Goalkeeper
Status: Leaving — Contract Expired
Yann Sommer’s Inter career was a success by any reasonable measure. The Swiss keeper replaced Samir Handanovic in 2023 and performed with consistent quality — sharp reflexes, composed distribution, the kind of experienced professionalism that settled a potentially turbulent transition.
His departure is clean and well-managed. Inter invested in Josep Martinez as Sommer’s long-term successor, and Martinez has developed into a capable, commanding first-choice option. The succession was planned, executed, and is now complete.
Sommer leaves with two Scudetti and a Champions League final appearance. A fine servant, a clean exit.
Impact: Minimal.
2. Francesco Acerbi — Center Back
Status: Leaving — Contract Expired
At 38, Acerbi’s departure was always inevitable. The veteran center-back has been everything Inter could have asked for since joining from Lazio — calm under pressure, experienced in the back three, a leader when the dressing room needed steadying.
Multiple Serie A clubs are reportedly interested in bringing him in, which speaks to a professionalism that has never wavered. He is not done playing — but his time at Inter is done.
The key question in Acerbi’s wake is defensive depth. With de Vrij’s situation still unresolved and the Bastoni speculation ongoing, Inter could enter the new season lighter than ideal at center-back. That is worth monitoring.
Impact: Medium — not because of Acerbi specifically, but because of what his exit means for defensive cover.
3. Stefan de Vrij — Center Back
Status: Uncertain — One-Year Extension Offered
Unlike the other names on this list, de Vrij’s exit is not yet confirmed. Inter have offered a one-year extension. The Dutch defender, 34, is weighing his options.
De Vrij has been managed carefully this season — his minutes limited, his role rotational — but he remains technically accomplished and completely reliable when called upon. Crucially, he understands and accepts his position in the squad hierarchy without causing noise about it.
If forced to keep one player from this group of departing veterans, de Vrij would be the choice. He is still a decent defender, still a quality passer, and — unlike some players in this situation — has no problem sitting on the bench. That acceptance of a squad role, without drama, is a quality money cannot buy.
But Inter’s priority should be moving on and building younger. If de Vrij leaves and the right replacement arrives, that is the correct outcome.
Impact: Depends on resolution. If he leaves without a center-back replacement, there is a problem. If the recruitment is right, no issue at all.
4. Matteo Darmian — Right Back / Wing-Back
Status: Leaving — Possibly Transitioning Into Coaching
Darmian’s playing chapter at Inter is finished. At 36, he was never going to be the answer to the Dumfries problem — he was the reliable understudy who never complained, always performed when called upon, and gave five years of professional service to the cause.
Reports suggest he is considering whether to continue playing elsewhere or to transition into a coaching or backroom role — potentially within Inter’s own structure. The latter would be a welcome addition. Winners belong in winning environments. The culture, the standards, the understanding of what it takes to succeed at this club — Darmian carries all of that.
Keep him in the building in some capacity. Inter fans know he is one of the good ones.
Impact: On the pitch: none. In the training environment: potentially valuable.
5. Denzel Dumfries — Right Wing-Back
Status: Confirmed — Real Madrid (€20m Release Clause)
The biggest exit — and the most complicated one emotionally.
Five years, 207 appearances, two Scudetti, three Coppa Italias. Dumfries gave Inter good service and is leaving with a trophy cabinet most footballers would envy. On a human level, it is hard to begrudge him a move to the Bernabéu.
The frustration is purely structural. The €20m release clause that allowed Real Madrid to walk in and take a starting Serie A wing-back for a fee that does not reflect his market value is a contractual mistake. It was likely agreed as part of the negotiations when Dumfries extended his deal — a goodwill gesture to facilitate a signing that kept him at the club. At the time, it made sense. In hindsight, it has cost Inter considerably.
The search for his replacement — whether Marco Palestra from Atalanta or one of the alternatives on the market — is the most pressing issue of the entire window. We have broken that down in full here.
Impact: High. The most important position to fill before pre-season.
The Bigger Picture: Trust the Process
Seven exits in a single window — including Dumfries — sounds alarming until you look at the profile of every player leaving. Every one of them is either at the end of their career, on the wrong side of 35, or has been superseded by a younger option the club has already invested in.
This is not decline. This is evolution.
Marotta has rebuilt Inter after bigger upheavals. The summer of 2021 — when both Lukaku and Hakimi departed — remains the template for how to turn apparent disaster into a foundation for something stronger. That summer produced Calhanoglu, Dzeko, and Dumfries himself.
This summer will produce its own answers. The squad that takes the field at San Siro in August 2026 will be younger, hungrier, and better built for the next chapter.
Get it right, and the next three years could be the best Inter fans have seen in a generation.
What’s your take on this story?
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1. Yann Sommer — Goalkeeper
2. Francesco Acerbi — Center Back
3. Stefan de Vrij — Center Back
4. Matteo Darmian — Right Back / Wing-Back
5. Denzel Dumfries — Right Wing-Back











