Brian Madjo has been training with Villa’s first team for months, but the €12m teenager is still waiting for FIFA clearance to make his competitive debut.

FIFA has refused to register Madjo due to regulations surrounding international transfers of under-18 players

The 17-year-old joined from Metz in January with Villa frustrated by the ongoing delay per The Athletic

Madjo has since switched international allegiance from Luxembourg to England and has nine Under-17 caps

Villa describe him as “one of the brightest young talents in European football” with first-team training already underway

The situation. More than two months and still waiting

Six months after completing his reported €12m move from Metz, Brian Madjo has still not made a single competitive appearance for Aston Villa. He has been training with Emery’s squad and he has been posting compilation videos on social media looking sharp, hungry and in excellent physical condition. He cost significant money. And Villa’s supporters have not caught a single competitive glimpse of him.

The reason is specific and deeply frustrating. FIFA has refused to register Madjo due to regulations surrounding the international transfer of players under the age of 18. Those rules, always complex, became significantly more restrictive for English clubs following Brexit. The exemptions that previously allowed certain transfers involving young European players no longer apply. Villa are caught in a bureaucratic process that they were reportedly aware of when completing the deal, but pressed ahead with regardless.

He’s 6’4 already played games for Metz senior team. Already has 3 caps for the Luxembourg national team — now been bought by Aston Villa for €12m. All this at just 16 years of age. 🤯

Hopefully a big future for Brian Madjo 👏#avfc pic.twitter.com/vUo2MdEEoY

— 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗔𝗩𝗙𝗖 𝗙𝗮𝗶𝘁𝗵𝗳𝘂𝗹 | 𝕏 (@theavfcfaithful) January 8, 2026

The Athletic confirmed in March that Villa are “frustrated that the registration process is taking so long.” That specific acknowledgement from a club that achieved every major objective this season regardless, reflects a genuine and ongoing irritation with a situation that has no clear resolution timeline.

The Player. Why Villa took the risk

The biographical detail surrounding Madjo makes his situation even more unusual. Born in London, he moved to Luxembourg at a young age and initially represented the country at international level, earning his first senior caps in March 2025. Those appearances were not competitive fixtures, meaning England were not locked out of registering him. He has since switched allegiance to England and already holds nine Under-17 caps.

Villa’s decision to press ahead with the signing despite knowing registration would be problematic, reflects a specific and deliberate calculation. The club’s sources described Madjo as physically ready for first-team football. Technically and mentally, he is described as “one for the future.” The combination of physical readiness and long-term potential convinced Villa’s recruitment team to act quickly stealing a march on European rivals who were also monitoring the teenager.

Emery’s squad trained with Madjo immediately upon his January arrival. The physical assessment has been positive throughout. Whether the technical and mental readiness for consistent senior football is fully developed remains the outstanding question, one that only competitive minutes can definitively answer.

The Alysson parallel. A January that delivered nothing immediately

The broader January context adds further frustration. Villa’s other January signing, young Brazilian forward Alysson, arrived simultaneously and promptly suffered persistent injury problems. The combination of Madjo’s registration issues and Alysson’s fitness struggles meant a combined investment of approximately £25m delivered zero first-team impact during the second half of a historic season.

Villa achieved their goals anyway, Europa League glory and fourth place confirmed. The January reinforcement plan simply never materialised. The club’s strength and depth across the existing squad carried them through regardless.

What comes next. Questions without clear answers

The outstanding questions surrounding Madjo’s immediate future are genuinely unresolved. Could he be registered for a loan spell elsewhere, allowing him to gain competitive minutes while the FIFA situation is addressed? Would remaining at Bodymoor Heath training between the first team and Under-21s better prepare him for a potential January debut? Neither answer is currently clear.

🟣🔵Brian Madjo🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 is putting the extra work in to maximize his ability!
-> The best athletes practice more than others! Thats not a secret in sports in general!

Brian looks to be in great shape👏#UTV #avfc🦁 pic.twitter.com/jdpafRZ0Uv

— Espen🦁 (@espenstrand) June 5, 2026

What is clear is that Villa’s recruitment team believed emphatically enough in Madjo’s quality to accept the registration risk and move quickly. That conviction from a recruitment department that has consistently identified outstanding young talent is the most important and reassuring detail in an otherwise frustrating story.

ReadAstonVilla Verdict

The registration issue is genuinely bizarre, but the underlying conviction is entirely understandable. Villa moved quickly, accepted the bureaucratic risk, and secured a teenager they believe could become one of European football’s most exciting young forwards. The wait has been long. The competitive debut must arrive soon. When it does, the expectation is that it will be worth every frustrated month of waiting.

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