If you are asking what Dion Bejio might fetch on the open market, a sensible headline is roughly 10 million, give or take a couple of million. That sits comfortably between the bigger fees for hyped youngsters and the lower figures we have seen for players of similar age and profile.


Comparisons that matter

We can learn a lot from recent transfers. Martin Baturina and Peter Sucic moved for 18 and 14 respectively, both younger and with more hype at the time, so it is fair they attracted bigger fees. Going back a season, Sutalo reportedly went to Ajax for a figure around 20. On the flip side, Luka Ivanecic, the same age as Dion, moved for about 7 to Feyenoord in that window. Dion's own history is relevant too: a move to Germany for 3 million, a couple of seasons split between Germany and a loan in Austria, then a transfer to Zagreb for 4 million. Taken together, those numbers point to a step up from his previous fee, but not necessarily into the top tier of youngster sales.


Why the price could move

Transfer values are rarely simple sums. Age, position, perceived ceiling, sell-on clauses and how urgently Dinamo need to sell all influence offers. Performances in big matches and recent form lift prices quickly. The buying club matters too; a suitor from one of the top leagues will typically pay more than a mid-table side elsewhere. Timing also counts, summer windows differ from January. So while 10 million is a fair midpoint, it could be nudged up or down depending on those variables.


What it means for fans

For Rangers fans looking in, the practical point is simple. If Dion goes for around 10 million, that is a decent return relative to his previous fees and to what Dinamo paid. It gives the selling club flexibility to reinvest. To be fair, none of this is guaranteed, but using recent transfers as a yardstick gives a measured estimate rather than wild guesswork. Truth is, the market will do the talking, but thinking of Dion in an 8 to 12 million bracket feels about right.

Written by Rangers 06: 7 June 2026