Game Changers: Business & Branding

The NFL’s Highest-Paid Players 2024

After a record-breaking offseason for contracts, the Detroit Lions’ Jared Goff leads a group of 10 gridiron stars collectively hauling in an estimated $644 million this year.

By Brett Knight, Forbes Staff


An NFL offseason that doled out a record $12.4 billion in new contracts—a whopping $2 billion beyond the mark set in 2022, according to data tracking by Spotrac—also set or matched the high for average annual contract value at 13 different positions. The football trailblazers include left tackle Tristan Wirfs, poised to make an average of $28.1 million a year with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Detroit Lions right tackle Penei Sewell, who will earn $28 million on average. The Kansas City Chiefs’ Chris Jones lifted the ceiling for defensive tackles to $31.8 million while Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson, at $35 million, is now the top-earning player who is not a quarterback.

It’s a long list of names, and a whole lot of cash. But this season, even a record payday isn’t enough to guarantee a spot on the list of the NFL’s 10 highest-paid players.

That honor is reserved for nine star quarterbacks—led by the Detroit Lions’ Jared Goff with an estimated $85.6 million, including his playing contract, endorsements and other business endeavors—plus Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, who comes in at No. 7 with an estimated $52 million.

Combined, the top 10 players are set to collect $644 million in the 2024 league year (before taxes and agents’ fees), demolishing the record of $508 million set last year. The total is more than twice what the top 10 took home just seven years ago, when 2017’s list collectively earned $296 million. And the $47 million cutoff for this year’s top 10 is up 15% from 2023’s record $41 million.

For the third year in a row, the list includes at least nine quarterbacks, and there have been no fewer than seven since 2018. Kelce is the lone aberration thanks to a monstrous $35 million in estimated off-field income, the best mark in the 15-year history of Forbes’ ranking by any player not named Tom Brady. (In each of his final two years with the Buccaneers, Brady hauled in at least $44 million off the field, according to Forbes estimates.) The largest chunk of Kelce’s money will come from the New Heights podcast he co-hosts with his brother, former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce, after they struck a three-year deal with Amazon’s Wondery in August for a minimum of $105 million over three years, according to a person with knowledge of the agreement.

That abruptly ends a one-year reign by Travis Kelce’s Chiefs teammate Patrick Mahomes as football’s off-field king. But Mahomes, who has lucrative endorsement deals including Adidas, State Farm and Subway, is still head and shoulder pads above the rest of the league with an estimated $25 million in off-field earnings. No other player in the top 10 for total earnings expects to make more than $10 million away from the game this year, according to Forbes estimates.

The real boost to NFL players’ pay is coming on the field as teams’ revenue soars, up 8% year over year to an average of $630 million last season, according to Forbes estimates. Because the league’s collective bargaining agreement guarantees players at least 48% of all revenue, those increases are driving up the salary cap—to $255.4 million this season, a $30 million increase over 2023—and giving front offices more money to spend. Just look at wide receiver, where the five top contracts ever as measured by average annual value—and 10 of the top 15 for the position—were signed within the last six months, according to Spotrac tracking.



Of course, no matter a contract’s average annual value, what an NFL player actually receives in any 12-month span can vary widely. For instance, Green Bay Packers quarterback Jordan Love got a record $75 million signing bonus, paid upfront, boosting him to No. 3 on the earnings ranking with a total of $80.5 million for 2024. His on-field pay is reportedly due to drop to $13 million next year, however, before rocketing back up to $51 million in 2026. A different bonus structure left the Jacksonville Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence and the Miami Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa just shy of the top 10 for 2024, even though their average annual figures ($55 million and $53.1 million, respectively) are in line with Love’s $55 million.

Those fluctuations ensure that the NFL’s top 10—unlike, say, the NBA’s highest-paid players—looks quite a bit different every year, with now-retired quarterback Drew Brees standing as the last back-to-back earnings leader, from 2012 and 2013. But there may already be a favorite to lead the 2025 list: Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, who is entering the final season of a four-year contract and had hoped to sign an extension this offseason.

His patience may be rewarded—and the NFL’s contract record book may need another rewrite.

Editor’s note: After the publication of this article, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott signed a contract extension for a reported four years and $240 million, with a record $80 million signing bonus and a record average annual value of $60 million. He is due to make $86.3 million on the field during the 2024 league year, plus an estimated $10 million off the field. Prescott’s new contract will be reflected on Forbes’ 2025 list of the world’s highest-paid athletes.


#1. $85.6 million

Age: 29 | Position: Quarterback | Team: Detroit Lions | On-Field: $80.6 million • Off-Field: $5 million

After guiding the Lions to their first playoff appearance in seven years, Goff received a four-year, $212 million contract extension in May, with $170 million in practical guarantees plus a no-trade clause. His $73 million signing bonus stood as an NFL record for two months, until Jordan Love eclipsed him with $75 million from the Packers. Goff supplements his income with endorsements from brands including Ford, Old Spice and—appropriately—Jared jewelers, and it appears he knows how to spend it: Last year, he bought neighboring homes in Manhattan Beach, California, for $10.5 million and $8.6 million, among the most expensive real estate transactions by a sports figure in 2023, according to analysis by luxury real estate brokerage RubyHome Northwest.



#2. $81 million

Age: 28 | Position: Quarterback | Team: Kansas City Chiefs | On-Field: $56 million • Off-Field: $25 million

Mahomes, who turns 29 this month, still has the largest contract in NFL history as measured by total value, with the 10-year, $450 million deal he signed in 2020. On an annual basis, however, he’s been surpassed: 10 quarterbacks now have higher per-year averages. As Mahomes seeks a third straight Super Bowl title, and fourth overall, the question is when the Chiefs will give him a raise—although he isn’t agitating for one. “It’s awesome for the game of football,” Mahomes told USA Today in July, commenting on the megadeals for rising stars Jordan Love and Tua Tagovailoa. “I’m doing pretty well myself.” Mahomes can certainly afford to take that magnanimous attitude given he has the best portfolio of traditional endorsements in football, including a deal he picked up with Prime sports drinks in December after his previous beverage sponsor, BioSteel, declared bankruptcy last September. Mahomes also launched Throne Sport Coffee in May as the company’s second-largest shareholder, and he was a producer on the Netflix docuseries Receiver.


#3. $80.5 million

Age: 25 | Position: Quarterback | Team: Green Bay Packers | On-Field: $79 million • Off-Field: $1.5 million


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