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Harry Kane says he is open to signing a new contract with Bayern Munich and admits his desire to return to the Premier League has waned since his move to Germany. The 32-year-old England captain joined Bayern from Tottenham Hotspur in the summer of 2023 for £86.4 million. Since then, he has scored an astonishing 103 goals in 106 appearances and helped the club secure the 2024-25 Bundesliga title — the first major honour of his career. Speaking this week, Kane revealed he is “fully all in” at Bayern and willing to open talks over extending his current four-year deal, which runs until 2027.
“In terms of staying longer, I could definitely see that,” Kane said.
“I spoke openly a couple of weeks ago that I have not had those conversations with Bayern yet, but if they were to arise I would be willing to talk and have an honest conversation."
Kane admitted that while a Premier League return was once a certainty in his mind, his perspective has shifted during his time in Bavaria.
“If you had asked me when I first left to go to Bayern, I would have said for sure I would come back,” he added.
“Now I have been there a couple of years, I would probably say that has gone down a little bit, but I wouldn't say I would never go back.”
Tottenham manager Thomas Frank has expressed interest in bringing Kane back to North London, where he remains Spurs' all-time leading goalscorer. Kane also needs 48 more Premier League goals to surpass Alan Shearer’s record of 260.
However, for now, the striker is focused on continuing his success in Germany.
“Right now, I would say we are in a fantastic moment and I am not thinking about anything else,” he said.
“I am fully all in with Bayern.”
Kane also reflected on how finally winning a major trophy has affected his mindset. Having previously gone without silverware for his entire career, lifting the Bundesliga trophy last season has only fuelled his ambition.
“When you win a title like I did last year, maybe it could be easy to go the other way and be like, 'OK, I've done what I wanted to achieve',” he explained.
“But it's given me more motivation to do more and be better. I think I've shown that this year.”
The England striker recently became the fastest player this century to reach 100 goals for a top-five European club, hitting the milestone in just 104 matches — a record-breaking run that continues to redefine his legacy on the continent.