Dodgers deferred contracts, explained: How do LA's nearly $1 billion future payments work with MLB rules?

Dan Treacy

Dodgers deferred contracts, explained: How do LA's nearly $1 billion future payments work with MLB rules? image

The Dodgers are at it again.

One year after they deferred more than 97% of superstar Shohei Ohtani's mega contract, and included deferrals in Will Smith's 10-year extension as well, the Dodgers added two-time Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell with the help of more deferrals.

Snell's deferrals aren't nearly as significant as those in Ohtani's deal. Los Angeles is deferring $62 million of his five-year, $182 million deal, enough to reduce the contract's impact against the luxury tax threshold. With the agreement, though, the Dodgers are now on the hook for even more money down the line as they continue to chase championships.

Here's a look at the Dodgers' deferred contracts and how they align with MLB rules.

MORE: How Blake Snell impacts Dodgers' 2025 payroll

Dodgers deferred contracts, explained

PlayerTotal valueDeferred moneyPercent deferred
Shohei Ohtani$700 million$680 million97.1
Will Smith$140 million$50 million35.7
Freddie Freeman$162 million$57 million35.2
Blake Snell$182 million$62 million34.1
Tommy Edman$74 million$25 million33.8
Mookie Betts$365 million$115 million31.5

After Tommy Edman's extension, the Dodgers owe $989 million in deferred money on their current contracts.

Five contracts on the Dodgers' payroll include deferred money, and more than 30% of each deal is deferred. Ohtani's deal is unique, however. All but $20 million of his $700 million mega contract is deferred, meaning he's making $2 million per year and will make $68 million without interest in each of the 10 years after the deal expires.

Ohtani's deal still counts for more than $45 million against the luxury tax threshold, but deferrals allow the hit to be much less than the contract's $70 million annual value. Smith, Snell, Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts are also on deferred deals, though less than half of each deal is deferred. 

Deferrals aren't all that brings down Snell's contract value against the luxury tax. His deal comes with a whopping $52 million signing bonus, putting the Dodgers on the hook for plenty of money immediately. Rather than counting for $36.4 million against the tax threshold, Snell's deal will count for $32-33 million. 

Yoshinobu Yamamoto's 12-year, $325 million contract does not include deferrals, but a signing bonus similarly reduced its hit against the tax threshold.

MORE: First look at Dodgers' starting rotation with Blake Snell

Are Dodgers deferred contracts against MLB rules?

MLB's collective bargaining agreement has no limits on deferred money in contracts. There is no cap on total deferrals or the percentage of a deal that can be deferred, so the Dodgers aren't breaking any MLB rules with the way they've structured many of their largest contracts. 

The rules allow teams like the Dodgers to simply kick the can down the road to keep a team together or add other pieces in the short-term. While it might feel like Los Angeles has limitless money, the addition of Yamamoto might not have been possible without Ohtani deferring so much of his contract a year ago. In the end, it paid off with a championship. 

The Dodgers will be on the hook for plenty of money once these deals wrap up — Freeman's contract already has only three years remaining — but their hope is salaries (and revenue) will continue to rise, and $68 million in 2040, for example, won't be as much of a blow as it would be today.

MLB deferred contracts list

The Dodgers are the kings of deferred contracts at the moment, but they didn't invent the concept. Here's a look at active contracts with deferrals.

Current deferred contracts

PlayerTotal valueDeferred moneyTeam
Shohei Ohtani$700 million$680 millionDodgers
Mookie Betts$365 million$115 millionDodgers
Stephen Strasburg$245 million$80 millionNationals
Rafael Devers$313.5 million$75 millionRed Sox
Blake Snell$182 million$62 millionDodgers
Freddie Freeman$162 million$57 millionDodgers
Nolan Arenado$214 million$50 millionCardinals
Francisco Lindor$341 million$50 millionMets
Chris Sale$165 million$50 millionBraves
Will Smith$140 million$50 millionDodgers
Christian Yelich$215 million$28 millionBrewers
Edwin Diaz$102 million$26.5 millionMets
Tommy Edman$74 million$25 millionDodgers
J.T. Realmuto$115 million$10 millionPhillies

While his MLB career is finished due to injuries, former Nationals ace Stephen Strasburg is still just five years into the seven-year deal he signed with Washington after the 2019 season. That deal includes $80 million in deferred money, the most of any active non-Dodgers contract.

Rafael Devers, Nolan Arenado, Christian Yelich and J.T. Realmuto all have deferred money on their current deals, while Mets owner Steve Cohen included deferrals in deals signed by Francisco Lindor and Edwin Diaz.

SN's MLB HQ: Live MLB scores | Updated MLB standings | Full MLB schedule

Expiring deferred contracts

PlayerTotal valueDeferredTeam
Chris Sale$145 million$50 millionRed Sox
Patrick Corbin$140 million$10 millionNationals

Two contracts with deferred money recently expired. Chris Sale is starting a new deal with the Braves after his five-year deal originally signed with the Red Sox ended, while former Nationals starter Patrick Corbin is now a free agent. Both expiring deals contained deferred money, though Corbin's was only a fraction of the total value.

Historic deferred contracts

The total number of deferred contracts in MLB history isn't known, but here's a roundup of some of the most notable ever signed:

PlayerTotal valueDeferredTeam
Bobby Bonilla$29 million$1.19M annually over 25 yearsMets
Chris Davis$161 million$42 millionOrioles
Ken Griffey Jr.$112.5 million$57.9MReds
Manny Ramirez$160 million$32 millionRed Sox
Max Scherzer$210 million$105 millionNationals
Bruce Sutter$9.1 million$1.2M annually over 33 yearsBraves

Bonilla has the most famous deferred contract in MLB history, as interest payments of $1.19 million will be paid to him by the Mets each July 1 until 2035, despite the deal being signed in 1991.

Hall of Fame closer Bruce Sutter had a similar deal, however, as interest payments through 2022 allowed him to make much more than the $9.1 million original value of his contract.

Max Scherzer, meanwhile, will be paid $15 million annually by the Nationals through 2028, while former Orioles slugger Chris Davis is on the books in Baltimore through 2037.

The Reds made their final payment to Ken Griffey Jr. earlier in 2024, while the Red Sox will pay Manny Ramirez through 2026 after they agreed at the end of his tenure to spread out the remaining money on his deal.

Dan Treacy

Dan Treacy Photo

Dan Treacy is a content producer for Sporting News, joining in 2022 after graduating from Boston University. He founded @allsportsnews on Instagram in 2012 and has written for Lineups and Yardbarker.