The MLB minimum salary in 2026 is $780,000 — the floor beneath a sport whose stars make $70 million, and the actual paycheck for a huge share of every roster. Roughly a third of the players on Opening Day rosters earn at or near the minimum, because baseball’s pay system makes almost everyone wait years for real money. Here’s the full picture: the current number, how it’s scheduled, who earns it and for how long, and how it stacks against the other leagues.
The chart below covers the 2026 figure, the history, and the system around it. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.
Why a $780,000 “Minimum” Is Baseball’s Biggest Fight
The minimum salary sounds like a footnote until you realize how much of the sport lives on it. Baseball’s service-time system routes nearly every player through three seasons of club control at or near the floor before arbitration begins, which means the league’s best bargains — often its MVP candidates — earn $780,000 while producing $30 million of value, a gap no other major sport tolerates at the same scale. That’s why the minimum is the union’s most fought-over number: it’s the only raise most players get a vote on, since the majority of careers end before free agency ever arrives. The floor’s history tells the story in one line — essentially frozen near $6,000 for decades until Marvin Miller’s union arrived in 1966, then climbing a hundredfold in sixty years — and the 2022 CBA’s twin patches (the biggest minimum jump ever, plus a bonus pool for elite pre-arb players) were the latest round of the same argument. The next round has a date: the agreement expires December 1, 2026, and whatever floor emerges will be the first number that tells you who won.
Final Word
The MLB minimum salary: $780,000 in 2026, the last scheduled step of a CBA that raised the floor from $700K in 2022 — pro-rated daily, paid to roughly a third of every roster, and endured for three service years before arbitration unlocks real raises, with a much lower split-contract rate lurking for 40-man players in the minors. It’s the number baseball’s entire labor history is written in, and it gets renegotiated this winter.
The ceiling above this floor is in the MLB luxury tax, explained, the grind below it is in minor league baseball salaries, and what draftees get up front is in MLB draft signing bonuses.