NFL Rookie Contract Scale: What Every 2026 Draft Pick Makes

Every one of the 257 players drafted in April 2026 will report to training camp this month on a contract he had almost no say in. The NFL rookie wage scale assigns a predetermined value to every draft slot — the higher the pick, the bigger the deal — and there is virtually nothing left to negotiate. It is a salary cap inside the salary cap: the league sets a total rookie pool tied to the overall cap ($301.2 million in 2026), and every slot from No. 1 to No. 257 carries its own price tag.

The stakes at the top are enormous. Quarterback Fernando Mendoza, taken No. 1 overall by the Las Vegas Raiders, is slotted for roughly $54.6 million over four years per Spotrac, fully guaranteed, with about $9.9 million in year one. The 32 first-round deals combined are worth more than $900 million, with signing bonuses accounting for roughly $542 million of that — bonuses jumped 18.5 percent over the 2025 class. And the single most expensive slide in the draft is one slot: falling from pick 32 to pick 33 costs a player about $3.2 million, plus the fifth-year option and full guarantees that only first-rounders get.

The chart below breaks down what every key slot pays in 2026, what separates Round 1 from everyone else, and how the fifth-year option works. Take a look, then we’ll get into the details.

NFL CONTRACTS 2026
The NFL Rookie Contract Scale
What every 2026 draft slot pays, from No. 1 overall to Round 7
TOP OF THE SCALE
$54.6M
No. 1 pick, four years
THE CLIFF
$3.2M
Lost from pick 32 to 33
THE FLOOR
$885K
2026 rookie minimum
EVERY DEAL
4 YRS
Round 1 adds a 5th-year option
2026 rookie scale by draft slot
Four-year contract totals via Spotrac
Pick 4-Year Total (Est.) Note
No. 1 $54,565,500 Fernando Mendoza, QB, Raiders
No. 2 $52,103,630 Fully guaranteed
No. 3 $50,537,014 Fully guaranteed
No. 4 $48,746,540 Last $48M-plus slot
No. 5 $45,613,238  
No. 6 $40,018,084  
No. 7 $35,541,950  
No. 8 $31,065,822  
No. 9 $30,841,760  
No. 10 $29,611,072 Roughly half the No. 1 slot
No. 11 $27,708,728  
No. 12 $25,023,034  
No. 13 $24,351,620  
No. 14 $23,232,590  
No. 15 $22,785,000  
No. 16 $21,442,128 Middle of Round 1
No. 32 $16,168,614 Last fully guaranteed slot
No. 33 $12,937,488 First pick of Round 2 — no 5th-year option
No. 64 $10,211,401 Final pick of Round 2
Nos. 249-257 $4.4M (Est.) Seventh-round range
Slot values as of the April 2026 draft. Every drafted player signs a four-year deal; only Round 1 contracts are fully guaranteed.
Round 1 vs. everyone else
What a first-round slot buys beyond the dollars
  Round 1 Rounds 2-7
Guarantees Fully guaranteed salary and bonus Typically partial guarantees
Fifth-year option Yes — team option, fully guaranteed when exercised None
Renegotiation After third regular season After third regular season
Undrafted comparison UDFAs sign three-year deals near the $885,000 minimum but hit free agency sooner
Fifth-year option tiers
Exercised after year three, no later than May 1; salary is fully guaranteed once picked up
Tier Qualification
Basic Did not hit playing-time or Pro Bowl thresholds
Playing time Met snap-share benchmarks over the first three seasons
One Pro Bowl One selection on the original ballot
Multiple Pro Bowls Two or more selections — top of the option scale
ROOKIE SCALE FACTS
Bonuses carry the growth
Signing bonuses rose 18.5% for 2026 after a 26% jump in 2025 — that is where cap inflation shows up in rookie deals.
Locked for three years
No drafted player can renegotiate until after his third regular season — a 2026 pick waits until January 2029 at the earliest.
Escalators are banned
The incentive packages that inflated pre-2011 rookie deals are prohibited, which is why the scale holds slot to slot.

Why the Round 1 to Round 2 Cliff Matters

The drop from pick 32 to pick 33 is the most expensive single slot in the draft — about $3.2 million in contract value, plus the loss of full guarantees and the fifth-year team option. That option is the real prize: exercised after a player’s third season and no later than May 1, it locks in a fully guaranteed fifth year priced by the four tiers in the chart, and it guarantees any unguaranteed fourth-year salary along with it. It is why agents fight to keep clients inside Round 1, and why teams trading back into the late first round are buying a fifth year of control as much as a player.

The Bottom Line

The rookie wage scale removed nearly all drama from draft-pick contracts: four years, slotted money, and a negotiation limited to bonus timing and offset language. The real leverage points are structural — making Round 1 for the guarantees and the option year, and reaching that third-season renegotiation window. For the players who don’t crack the 53-man roster out of camp, the money changes completely; see our breakdown of practice squad salaries in 2026. And for what happens to veterans at the other end of the contract cycle, our guide to the franchise tag covers the NFL’s most restrictive one-year deal.