
The Los Angeles Dodgers' 2026 opening day payroll is $410.8 million, setting a likely MLB record. The actual payout this year is $261.7 million, with deferred payments impacting the overall figures.
The Dodgers' opening day payroll for 2026 is $410.8 million.
The Dodgers are actually paying $261.7 million in 2026.
Deferred payments refer to salary portions that players, like Shohei Ohtani, will receive in future years, impacting the current payroll accounting.
Shohei Ohtani is the largest contributor to the Dodgers' payroll in 2026.


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Deferred compensation obligations incurred in a Contract executed on or after September 30, 2002 must be fully funded by the Club, in an amount equal to the present value of the total deferred compensation obligation, on or before the second July 1 following the championship season in which the deferred compensation is earned. For purposes of this Article XVI, full funding of the present value of deferred compensation obligations shall mean that the Club must have funded, for the duration of and without interruption in each year, the current present value of the then outstanding deferred payments, discounted by 5% annually. In other words, the Dodgers by this July 1 have to set aside funds to cover his $68 million deferred payment from 2024. If they set aside nothing until July 1, theyâd have to pony up about $50.7 million this year to fund that payment scheduled for 2034. In reality, the Dodgers likely *already* set aside money for this. âItâs just how you account for it. You have to fund a lot of it right now, and having that money go to work for you,â Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said in December 2024. âA lot of our ownership group are from financial background, and can have that money going to work right now, and not something that sneaks up on us. Weâre not going to wake up in 2035 and say, âOh my God, thatâs right. Thereâs this money due.â Weâll plan for it along the way.â But to keep this an apples-to-apples comparison to each of the previous 17 years, Iâm not including any of the money set aside for deferred payments. The purposes of that accounting is fairly well captured by the competitive balance tax calculations anyway, and gives a picture of the expected punitive costs coming at the end of the year as well. I did separate the opening day payroll into three categories â active roster, injured list, and other. Since this was about opening day three weeks ago, *only* 10 Dodgers were on the injured list then and two have since been added. Other is a catch-all, usually for dead money, paying players no longer around. Justin Turner counts here, as he got the final $2 million of his $8 million signing bonus on January 15, from his contract signed in 2021. Also in âotherâ here are Hyeseong Kim and Jack Suwinski, both of whom signed guaranteed contracts but each began the season in the minors. | Year | Active | IL | Other | Total | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | 2010 | $77.9 | $1.0 | $14.5 | $93.4 | | 2011 | $83.4 | $13.4 | $16.3 | $113.1 | | 2012 | $78.3 | $13.5 | $22.2 | $114.0 | | 2013 | $185.3 | $40.5 | $16.0 | $241.8 | | 2014 | $172.5 | $71.8 | $25.5 | $269.8 | | 2015 | $195.9 | $24.7 | $45.5 | $266.1 | | 2016 | $150.5 | $66.1 | $19.3 | $235.9 | | 2017 | $161.2 | $27.7 | $38.9 | $227.8 | | 2018 | $137.2 | $14.2 | $26.0 | $177.4 | | 2019 | $123.7 | $51.7 | $30.6 | $206.0 | | 2020 | $174.4 | $31.8 | $15.4 | $221.6 | | 2021 | $218.0 | $11.0 | $8.1 | $237.0 | | 2022 | $222.1 | $9.4 | $32.0 | $263.5 | | 2023 | $157.9 | $30.2 | $22.5 | $210.6 | | 2024 | $246.4 | $25.0 | $6.0 | $277.5 | | 2025 | $316.0 | $31.7 | $7.2 | $354.8 | | 2026 | $217.5 | $37.3 | $7.0 | $261.7 | The $37.25 million the Dodgers had on the injured list to open the season is their highest since starting 2019 with $51.7 million on the sideline. As for the details of this yearâs payroll, letâs look at the individual contracts. Iâve tracked all these contracts as they happen, and you can see many intricate details in our Dodgers payroll section on the site. For this yearâs opening day payroll, some of the salaries of the players with between zero and three years of service time are courtesy of the Associated Press. Some of the biggest differences between actual and competitive balance tax payroll have to do with the timing of signing bonus payments and deferred salaries. Blake Snell, for instance, defers just over half ($13.2 million) of his salary ($26 million) each year, but also received all $52 million of his signing bonus in 2025. So this year he receives *only* $12.8 million while his CBT payroll number is about $31.357 million. Same for Teoscar HernĂĄndez, who got his $23 million signing bonus in 2025 and this year is deferring $8 million of his $12 million salary. So his actual payroll number here is $4 million, compared to about $19.96 million for CBT purposes. Also included in competitive balance tax payrolls are minor league salaries for players on the 40-man roster, which are estimated here to be about $2.5 million (aside from Kim); each teamâs share of funding the $50 million pre-arbitration bonus pool; and a summary of player benefits played by the team. Last yearâs number here was $18,206,789, so weâll assume $19 million here. That puts the Dodgersâ payroll for competitive balance tax purposes at roughly $410.8 million to open the season, which is to be expected after signing Kyle Tucker and Edwin DĂaz to record-setting contracts during the offseason. Last year the Dodgers shattered MLB records with a $417.3 million payroll for CBT purposes and an actual competitive balance tax paid of $169.4 million. This year, the Dodgers were nearly at that number on opening day. | Player | Pos | Actual payroll | CBT payroll | Notes | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Kyle Tucker | OF | $55,000,000 | $57,195,945 | 1st yr of 4-year deal | | Shohei Ohtani | DH/P | $2,000,000 | $46,076,769 | 3rd yr of 10-yr deal | | Tyler Glasnow | SP | $30,000,000 | $27,312,500 | 3rd yr of 5-yr deal | | Yoshinobu Yamamoto | SP | $12,000,000 | $27,083,333 | 3rd yr of 12-yr deal | | Mookie Betts | IF/OF | $20,000,000 | $25,554,824 | 6th yr of 12-yr deal | | Freddie Freeman | 1B | $15,000,000 | $24,699,249 | 5th yr of 6-yr deal | | Edwin DĂaz | RHP | $18,500,000 | $21,110,269 | 1st yr of 3-yr deal | | Teoscar HernĂĄndez | OF | $4,000,000 | $19,957,137 | 2nd yr of 3-yr deal | | Tanner Scott | LHP | $10,750,000 | $15,934,383 | 2nd yr of 4-yr deal | | Will Smith | C | $8,000,000 | $12,241,285 | 3rd yr of 10-yr deal | | Blake Treinen | RHP | $11,000,000 | $11,000,000 | 2nd yr of 2-yr deal | | Max Muncy | 3B | $10,000,000 | $10,000,000 | 1st yr of 2-yr deal | | Miguel Rojas | SS | $5,500,000 | $5,500,000 | 1-year deal | | Alex Vesia | LHP | $3,650,000 | $3,650,000 | 1-year deal | | Santiago Espinal | IF | $2,500,000 | $2,500,000 | 1-year deal | | Alex Call | OF | $1,600,000 | $1,600,000 | 1-year deal | | Jack Dreyer | LHP | $810,000 | $810,000 | team control | | Emmet Sheehan | SP | $810,000 | $810,000 | team control | | Andy Pages | OF | $800,000 | $800,000 | team control | | Ben Casparius | RHP | $800,000 | $800,000 | team control | | Roki Sasaki | SP | $800,000 | $800,000 | team control | | Justin Wrobleski | SP | $790,000 | $790,000 | team control | | Dalton Rushing | C | $790,000 | $790,000 | team control | | Edgardo HenrĂquez | RHP | $790,000 | $790,000 | team control | | Will Klein | RHP | $790,000 | $790,000 | team control | | Alex Freeland | IF | $782,500 | $782,500 | team control | | Evan Phillips | 60-IL | $6,500,000 | $6,500,000 | 1-year deal | | KikĂ© HernĂĄndez | 60-IL | $4,500,000 | $4,500,000 | 1-year deal | | Bobby Miller | 60-IL | $800,000 | $800,000 | team control | | Blake Snell | IL | $12,800,000 | $31,357,257 | 2nd yr of 5-yr deal | | Tommy Edman | IL | $6,000,000 | $13,040,190 | 2nd yr of 5-yr deal | | Brusdar Graterol | IL | $2,800,000 | $2,800,000 | 1-year deal | | Brock Stewart | IL | $1,300,000 | $1,300,000 | 1-year deal | | Jake Cousins | IL | $950,000 | $950,000 | team control | | Gavin Stone | IL | $810,000 | $810,000 | team control | | Landon Knack | IL | $790,000 | $790,000 | team control | | Hyeseong Kim (minors) | IF | $3,750,000 | $4,166,667 | 2nd yr of 3-yr deal | | Jack Suwinski (minors) | OF | $1,250,000 | $1,250,000 | 1-year deal | | Justin Turner | | $2,000,000 | $0 | deferred bonus | | Minor league salaries | | | $2,500,000 | MiLBers on 40-man roster | | Pre-arbitration pool | | | $1,666,667 | $50m split by 30 teams | | Team benefit costs | | | $19,000,000 | 2025 was $18,206,789 | | Totals | | $261,712,500 | $410,808,974 | | | Total active roster | | $217,462,500 | | | | Total injured list | | $37,250,000 | | | | Total other | | $7,000,000 | | |