Highest MLB Team Payrolls in 2026: All Ranked

In baseball, money does not guarantee a championship, but it sure helps. Every offseason, a handful of big-market teams spend at a level that dwarfs the rest of the league, building rosters that cost more than the next several teams combined. So which MLB team has the highest payroll in 2026, and how does the spending break down across the league?

The answer for 2026 comes with a twist. The team most people assume is the biggest spender is not actually first by the official cash payroll, thanks to a clever accounting strategy that has reshaped how baseball’s richest teams operate. The gap between the top spenders and the bottom of the league has also never been wider.

The chart below ranks the highest MLB team payrolls for the 2026 season, with each club’s figure and recent trend. Take a look, then we’ll break down the numbers and the history.

Highest MLB Team Payrolls (2026)
Opening day payrolls, present-day value
Highest Payroll
$352M
New York Mets
Highest by Tax
$413M
LA Dodgers
Tax Threshold
$244M
2026 line
Avg Salary
$5.34M
up 3.4%
Top 5 payrolls, 2026 (present-day value)
New York Mets$352.2M
Los Angeles Dodgers$316.6M
New York Yankees$297.2M
Philadelphia Phillies$282.0M
Toronto Blue Jays$269.0M
By present-day cash value, the Mets lead. By competitive balance tax payroll, the Dodgers top the league at roughly $413 million.
All 30 teams, 2026 opening-day payroll
# Team Payroll
1 New York Mets $352.2M
2 Los Angeles Dodgers $316.6M
3 New York Yankees $297.2M
4 Philadelphia Phillies $282.0M
5 Toronto Blue Jays $269.0M
6 Atlanta Braves $252.2M
7 Houston Astros $244.3M
8 Chicago Cubs $222.8M
9 San Diego Padres $208.3M
10 Detroit Tigers $206.7M
11 San Francisco Giants $195.6M
12 Boston Red Sox $194.5M
13 Arizona Diamondbacks $185.5M
14 Texas Rangers $180.2M
15 Los Angeles Angels $177.6M
16 Baltimore Orioles $161.2M
17 Seattle Mariners $160.5M
18 Kansas City Royals $142.8M
19 Milwaukee Brewers $124.1M
20 Cincinnati Reds $122.6M
21 Colorado Rockies $116.7M
22 St. Louis Cardinals $100.4M
23 Pittsburgh Pirates $99.9M
24 Minnesota Twins $96.5M
25 Athletics $89.8M
26 Tampa Bay Rays $88.7M
27 Washington Nationals $83.9M
28 Chicago White Sox $82.1M
29 Miami Marlins $76.2M
30 Cleveland Guardians $62.3M
2026 opening-day payrolls for all 30 teams, per the Associated Press, with deferred salaries discounted to present-day value. Figures shift during the season with trades and call-ups. The Dodgers rank first by competitive balance tax payroll (roughly $413 million); their lower figure here reflects heavy use of deferrals.
Top Payrolls by Year
Which team led MLB spending in recent seasons
Year Payroll Leader Figure
2026 New York Mets $352.2M
2025 New York Mets $323.1M
2024 New York Mets $305.6M
2023 New York Mets $355.4M
2022 Los Angeles Dodgers ~$270M
Opening-day payroll leaders. The Mets have led the sport in present-day payroll four straight years (2023 to 2026). The 2023 Mets’ $355.4 million was the highest single-season figure in MLB history at the time.
The Dodgers’ deferral trick
By deferring huge chunks of contracts like Shohei Ohtani’s $700 million deal, the Dodgers lower their present-day payroll to $316.6 million, even though their tax payroll tops $413 million. Without deferrals, their figure would be about $395 million.
A record-setting rivalry
A 2026 Mets-Dodgers series was the most expensive in MLB history, with combined payrolls plus tax bills topping $1.07 billion, breaking the record the same two teams set a year earlier.
The widening gap
The Mets’ $352 million is more than five times the Cleveland Guardians’ league-low $62.3 million. The spending gap between the top and bottom has rarely been larger.

The Team With the Highest Payroll in 2026

By the standard measure of opening-day payroll in present-day value, the New York Mets have the highest payroll in MLB for 2026 at roughly $352.2 million. Owner Steve Cohen has made the Mets the sport’s biggest spender for four straight seasons, anchored by Juan Soto, whose record 15-year, $765 million contract pays him a league-high $61.9 million this year. The Mets also boast the most expensive infield in baseball, with Soto joined by big-money deals for Francisco Lindor, Marcus Semien, and Bo Bichette.

Why the Dodgers Are Both First and Second

Here is where it gets interesting. While the Mets lead in cash payroll, the Los Angeles Dodgers actually top the league by competitive balance tax payroll, the figure MLB uses to assess luxury tax penalties, at roughly $413 million. The difference comes down to deferrals. The Dodgers have structured contracts like Shohei Ohtani’s $700 million deal so that most of the money is paid years down the road, which dramatically lowers the present-day value. By that present-day measure, the Dodgers sit second at $316.6 million, but by tax payroll, no one is close to them. It is a clever bit of financial engineering that lets them field a superteam while softening the immediate hit.

The Rest of the Big Spenders

Behind the two New York and Los Angeles giants, the New York Yankees ($297.2 million) and Philadelphia Phillies ($282 million) remain perennial heavyweights, with the Toronto Blue Jays jumping into the top five at $269 million after a roughly $30 million increase. The biggest leap of all came from the Detroit Tigers, who exploded from a $64 million payroll to $206.7 million in a single offseason, led by the record $32 million that ace Tarik Skubal won in arbitration. The Atlanta Braves and Chicago Cubs also added roughly $30 to 44 million each.

The Bottom of the League

At the other extreme, the spending gap has rarely been wider. The Cleveland Guardians carried the league’s lowest payroll at just $62.3 million, despite being one of the most consistently competitive teams in the American League, followed by the Miami Marlins ($76.2 million) and Chicago White Sox ($82.1 million). The St. Louis Cardinals, long a steady spender, cut their budget to roughly $100 million. The result is a league where the Mets spend more than five times what the lowest team does.

Top Payrolls by Year

The Mets have dominated recent payroll rankings, leading MLB in present-day payroll for four straight seasons from 2023 through 2026. Their 2023 figure of $355.4 million was the highest single-season payroll in baseball history at the time. Before the Mets’ run, the Dodgers and Yankees traded the top spot for years, with the Yankees having long been the sport’s defining big spender. The era of $300 million-plus payrolls is brand new: as recently as 2024 only two teams crossed $300 million, and now the very top of the league is pushing past $350 million in cash and $400 million in tax terms. If you enjoy these baseball breakdowns, see our look at the most career home runs all time.

The Bottom Line

The New York Mets have the highest MLB payroll in 2026 at roughly $352 million by present-day value, though the Los Angeles Dodgers lead by competitive balance tax payroll at about $413 million thanks to their heavy use of deferrals. Behind them, the Yankees, Phillies, and Blue Jays round out the biggest spenders, while teams like the Twins sit near $46 million, a fraction of the top. In an era of record contracts and ever-rising payrolls, the gap between baseball’s haves and have-nots has never been more stark.