Florentino Pérez has been re-elected -- unopposed -- as Real Madrid president for the next four years, the club has confirmed.
Pérez called presidential elections earlier this month, and potential candidates had 10 days to submit their candidacies to the club's board.
The 77-year old construction magnate and former politician has been Madrid president in two spells, between 2000 and 2006, and since 2009.
The club has strict eligibility requirements for the position, which were tightened in a vote of club members in 2012.
A candidate must have been a Real Madrid member for at least 20 years, and be able to provide a bank guarantee -- backed by their own personal wealth -- worth at least 15% of the club's budget.
Pérez has not faced an opposition candidate since returning as president in 2009, with no challengers in 2013, 2017, 2021 and now in 2025.
Madrid are the reigning LaLiga and Champions League winners and have already won two trophies this season -- the UEFA Super Cup and FIFA Intercontinental Cup -- but were beaten 5-2 by Barcelona in the Spanish Super Cup final on January 12.
Pérez is one of the most influential figures in Spain, and has transformed Real Madrid -- having a huge impact on Spanish, European and world football -- since first winning the presidency in 2000.
His first term, known as the 'Galáctico' era, saw him sign superstars Luis Figo, Zinedine Zidane, Ronaldo Nazario and David Beckham, winning two league titles and the 2002 Champions League.
However, three seasons without a trophy led Pérez to resign in 2006, as he was succeeded by Ramon Calderón.
Three years after that, Calderón also resigned, and Pérez returned to power in 2009.
His second spell in charge has been arguably the most successful in the club's history, winning LaLiga five times -- in 2012, 2017, 2020, 2022 and 2024 -- as well as six Champions Leagues, including an unprecedented three-in-a-row from 2016 to 2018, and twice under coach Carlo Ancelotti in 2022 and 2024.
In recent years, Pérez has been the driving force behind the Super League project -- relaunched last month as the Unify League -- arguing that major change is required to safeguard football's future.
As a result, he has clashed with UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin and, frequently, LaLiga president Javier Tebas, on a number of issues relating to football governance, and the league's handling of broadcast rights and its investment deal with CVC.