Chiral fullerene-metal hybrids with complete control over the four stereogenic centers, including the absolute configuration of the metal atom, have been synthesized for the first time. The stereochemistry of the four chiral centers formed during [60]fullerene functionalization is the result of both the chiral catalysts employed and the diastereoselective addition of the metal complexes used (iridium, rhodium, or ruthenium). DFT calculations underpin the observed configurational stability at the metal center, which does not undergo an epimerization process.Preparation of fullerenes in multigram amounts by Krätschmer et al. in 1990 [1] permitted the study of the reactivity of the new carbon allotropes with transition-metal complexes, which subsequently arose as one of the main fields in fullerene science. [2] To date, interest in fullerene-transitionmetal complexes has been renewed in the search for new applications and synergies arising from the complementary properties of transition metals and fullerenes. [3] Transition metal involvement in organic transformations drives the investigation of new complexes with catalytic activity. In particular, preparative methods for chiral metal complexesspecifically chiral-at-metal complexes-are highly sought after in current organometallic chemistry because of their relevance in enantioselective metal-mediated processes. [4] Despite the wealth of metal-fullerene hybrids reported to date, only a few are optically active. [2,5] To the best of our knowledge, only a single case presents a stereogenic metal center, [6] while in all examples the chiral information stems from the stoichiometric use of chiral ligands. [7] In this regard, the use of asymmetric organo-and metal-catalysis in fullerene chemistry has provided an easy access to optically active derivatives by precise stereocontrol of the newly formed asymmetric carbon atoms. [8] Conversely, control of the metalcentered chirality is not a trivial issue because of the configurational lability of the metals, which often undergo rapid ligand exchange. [4] Herein, we report the first enantioselective synthesis of fullerene hybrids endowed with a stable stereogenic metal center whose configuration can be defined at will by the proper choice of chiral catalyst. In these reactions, iridium, rhodium, and ruthenium pyrrolidino [3,4:1,2][60]fullerene half-sandwich complexes with four new stereocenters are formed; namely the two C2 and C5 chiral carbon atoms at the pyrrolidine ring, the asymmetric nitrogen atom, and the transition-metal center (Scheme 1). The functionalization and stereochemistry of the chiral fullerene ligand determines the final configuration of the metal center. Interestingly, the chiral metal center does not undergo any epimerization process, as indicated by variable-temperature NMR analysis as well as by DFT theoretical calculations.The syntheses of the chiral metal-fullerene hybrids were inspired by the preparation of half-sandwich complexes with aminocarboxylate ligands, [9] and take advantage ...