Calgary Tribune - NFL salary cap passes $300 mn for first time

NYSE - LSE
CMSD 0.64% 23.28 $
CMSC 0.26% 22.88 $
NGG -1.2% 88.48 $
GSK -1.36% 51.61 $
BCE 0.75% 23.96 $
BCC -1.46% 78.13 $
RIO 0.1% 100.58 $
RBGPF 0.79% 63.1 $
AZN -1.42% 184.74 $
BP -2.09% 46.41 $
BTI -0.15% 58.71 $
RYCEF 3.36% 16.35 $
JRI -0.08% 12.98 $
VOD 2.17% 16.15 $
RELX -0.66% 36.35 $
NFL salary cap passes $300 mn for first time
NFL salary cap passes $300 mn for first time / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP/File

NFL salary cap passes $300 mn for first time

NFL teams will each have a salary cap above $300 million for the first time, the league said Friday, as American football continues to enjoy explosive growth.

Text size:

The league's annual per-team salary cap is calculated based on league revenues, which have sky-rocketed thank to lucrative TV, licensing and sponsorship deals in recent years.

"NFL clubs were informed today that the salary cap for the '26 season will jump $22 million per club to $301.2 million," said league spokesman Brian McCarthy.

"Tremendous growth," he posted on social media.

Around 90 of the 100 most-watched live telecasts in the US each year are football -- mainly NFL, plus a handful of college games.

This month's Super Bowl between the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots was watched by 124.9 million viewers -- the second-most watched show in US history, behind the previous year's Super Bowl.

A game on Thanksgiving Day last year between the Kansas City Chiefs and Dallas Cowboys shattered regular-season TV records, with an average 57.23 million audience.

The 2025 regular season as a whole averaged 18.7 million viewers per game -- the second-highest on record.

The cap was introduced in 1994, determining how much each team can spend on players' salaries, and intended to keep the league competitive.

It is calculated through a formula agreed upon with the NFL Players Association as part of their collective bargaining agreement.

The cap was initially set at $34.6 million and reached $150 million in 2016. It has doubled in the decade since.

On top of the cap, there will be an additional $77.6 million per team for player benefits, which includes performance-based pay and benefits for retired players.

That lifts total per club player costs for the 2026 campaign to $378.8 million -- or more than $12 billion across the entire NFL.

K.Martin--CT