VfL Wolfsburg departures: Six players to leave following relegation
VfL Wolfsburg departures confirmed as six players leave after relegation: four return to parent clubs and two exit as free agents in a summer rebuild.
VfL Wolfsburg confirmed on Wednesday that six members of the first-team squad will depart the club following their relegation from the Bundesliga. The announced exits comprise four players who will revert to their parent clubs after loan spells and two squad members whose contracts expire at the end of June. The club described the moves as the opening phase of a broader summer reshuffle prompted by the drop to the second tier. Fans and observers will watch the transfer window closely as Wolfsburg prepares to reshape a squad built for top-flight football.
Six players announced as departures
VfL Wolfsburg made the departures official in a club statement that listed the six names leaving the squad this summer. Jeanuel Belocian, Adam Daghim, Jenson Seelt and Jesper Lindstrøm will return to their parent clubs once their loan agreements conclude. Jonas Wind and Kevin Paredes will also leave the club, with both players set to become free agents when their contracts end at the end of June.
The confirmations close one chapter of squad management that had relied on a mix of permanent signings and short-term loans. Wolfsburg’s announcement did not outline further planned exits, but the club said the departures were part of a necessary restructuring triggered by relegation. Supporters should expect further movement as Wolfsburg aligns personnel and finances with life outside the Bundesliga.
Loan players to return to parent clubs
Four of the outgoing players were at Wolfsburg on loan and will now rejoin their parent teams. Right-back Jeanuel Belocian is due back at Bayer 04 Leverkusen, while attacker Adam Daghim will return to FC Red Bull Salzburg. Defender Jenson Seelt’s spell ends with a return to AFC Sunderland, and Jesper Lindstrøm will re-enter the Napoli squad after his loan stint.
Each of these players arrived with different expectations and roles during their time at Wolfsburg, and their departures will remove short-term options for the coaching staff. For the parent clubs, the returns restore depth and flexibility ahead of their own planning for next season. Wolfsburg’s decision to allow the loan recalls to stand reflects the complexity of renegotiating deals when a club changes division.
Jonas Wind and Kevin Paredes to leave as free agents
Two longer-term members of the squad will exit on free transfers when their contracts expire at the end of June. Jonas Wind, who joined Wolfsburg amid significant expectations, departs after making 124 appearances and scoring 35 goals for the club. His contribution in front of goal made him one of Wolfsburg’s more consistent attacking options during his tenure.
Kevin Paredes also leaves as a free agent, having featured across 65 matches and scored four goals for the club. Paredes had shown versatility, operating in wide areas and contributing to the team’s build-up play. The loss of both players removes experienced figures from the roster and will require Wolfsburg to identify replacements or promote from within to plug the holes in attack and midfield.
Sporting and financial implications for Wolfsburg
The exits come against the broader backdrop of relegation, which carries immediate sporting and financial consequences for Wolfsburg. Dropping out of the Bundesliga typically reduces broadcast revenue and commercial income, forcing clubs to reassess wage bills and transfer spending. The confirmed departures will lower the immediate wage load and give the club greater scope to adjust payroll for 2. Bundesliga competition.
Sporting planning must now account for the different demands of the second tier, where squad balance, physicality and depth become priorities. Wolfsburg will need to field a competitive team capable of mounting an immediate promotion challenge while remaining fiscally responsible. The club’s hierarchy faces a two-fold task: rebuild a squad suited to promotion and protect the club’s financial stability during the transition.
Targets and priorities for the summer rebuild
Wolfsburg’s recruitment window will likely prioritize clarity in several key areas: a clinical striker to replace Wind’s goals, reinforcement on the flanks to offset Paredes’ departure, and defensive depth to sustain a long league campaign. Sporting directors often target players experienced in promotion battles or younger talents hungry to prove themselves, and Wolfsburg is expected to blend both approaches. There will also be attention on negotiating smart loans and free transfers, given the club’s altered revenue position.
Youth promotion is another plausible lever for Wolfsburg, which can mitigate transfer costs while maintaining a competitive squad profile. Integrating promising academy players into the first team would align with a longer-term rebuild strategy and provide cost-effective roster solutions. The club’s recruitment team will balance immediate promotion ambitions with sustainable squad construction over multiple seasons.
Club response and timeline for further moves
Club officials have framed these departures as the first step in a wider summer plan, with further announcements to follow as recruitment and contract discussions progress. Wolfsburg’s sporting leadership will now enter a concentrated period of scouting, negotiations and internal assessments ahead of the new season. Timelines for signings will depend on available targets, budgetary limits and the pace at which parent clubs make loaned players available on the market.
The club also faces a deadline-driven environment as the transfer window opens and rival teams position themselves. Wolfsburg must act quickly to secure priority targets while remaining prudent in negotiations. Clear communication with fans about the club’s strategy and realistic objectives will be important in managing expectations during a season shaped by recovery and a bid to return to the top flight.
The club’s confirmed departures mark the beginning of a pivotal summer for Wolfsburg as it seeks to rebuild after relegation and position itself for a return to the Bundesliga. The next weeks will reveal how the club balances immediate sporting needs with long-term sustainability.









