Robert Besser
06 Apr 2025, 19:57 GMT+10
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Major League Baseball (MLB) players now earn an average of over US$5 million per year for the first time, a study by The Associated Press shows.
The New York Mets have the highest payroll, spending $322.6 million, followed closely by the Los Angeles Dodgers at $319.5 million. In contrast, the Miami Marlins have the lowest payroll at $64.9 million.
The Dodgers increased their spending by $69 million, while other teams, such as Baltimore and Arizona, also raised their budgets significantly. Some teams, such as the Chicago White Sox and San Francisco Giants, have cut their payrolls.
Following their record 121-loss season, the Chicago White Sox cut payroll by $60.8 million, San Francisco by $39.1 million, Miami by $31.7 million, and St. Louis by $31.6 million. The American League champion Yankees dropped by $18.5 million.
Just five teams were under $100 million, with the Marlins joined by the A's ($74.9 million), Tampa Bay ($79.2 million), the White Sox ($80.9 million), and Pittsburgh ($87.9 million).
Soto broke the previous high of $43.3 million shared by pitchers Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander under deals they agreed to with the Mets.
Phillies pitcher Zack Wheeler is second at $42 million, followed by Texas pitcher Jacob deGrom and Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge at $40 million each.
The average rose 3.6 percent to $5,160,245. That was up from a 1.5 percent increase last year but down from an 11.1 percent increase in 2023.
Shohei Ohtani's $70 million salary is spread out over future years, so it counts as $28.2 million in current payroll calculations. Juan Soto now holds the record for the highest MLB salary at $61.9 million.
Over half of MLB players earn at least $1 million, and 15 players make $30 million or more. The median salary has dropped to $1.35 million.
The AP's figures include salaries and prorated shares of signing bonuses and other guaranteed income.
Payroll figures account for adjustments related to cash transactions in trades, signing bonuses that are the club's responsibility upon contract agreement, option buyouts, and termination pay for released players.
Get a daily dose of Los Angeles Herald news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Los Angeles Herald.
More InformationNEW YORK CITY, New York: Major League Baseball (MLB) players now earn an average of over US$5 million per year for the first time,...
HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania: The owners of Pennsylvania's largest former coal power plant plan to turn it into a US$10 billion natural...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Many government workers who help run Head Start, a federally funded preschool program, have been put on leave. The...
LONDON/DETROIT: As U.S. automakers brace for the financial impact of new 25 percent tariffs, car dealers with inventory built before...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Boeing's top executive faced lawmakers on April 2 as the company worked to repair its reputation following a string...
PRESCOTT, Arizona: More than 1,000 firefighters and fire managers recently trained at the annual wildfire academy in Arizona. They...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Major League Baseball (MLB) players now earn an average of over US$5 million per year for the first time,...
PRESCOTT, Arizona: More than 1,000 firefighters and fire managers recently trained at the annual wildfire academy in Arizona. They...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: A wave of Ghibli-inspired AI artwork has sent ChatGPT usage skyrocketing, as users have embraced the image-generation...
WASHINGTON/LOS ANGELES: The U.S. government is intensifying scrutiny of corporate diversity policies, with Disney and ABC now under...
BISHOP, California: A fast-growing wildfire in California's Eastern Sierra region has burned 1,000 acres and forced people to leave...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida: After a rocky debut marked by a critical system malfunction, NASA and Boeing are moving forward with testing...