With Pete Alonso's two-year, $54 million deal agreed upon—$27 million of which will count toward 2025—the Mets' roster payroll has jumped to an impressive $320 million. Second only to the Los Angeles Dodgers' estimated $382 million, it solidifies the Mets as one of the MLB's highest-spending teams once again.
The 2025 luxury tax threshold is $241 million, meaning the Mets are about $79 million over the limit and subject to financial penalties.
Pete Alonso's 2 year, $54 million contract to return to the #Mets includes $30M in 2025 ($10M signing bonus), plus a $24M player option in 2026.
— Spotrac (@spotrac) February 6, 2025
The $27M APY salary increases the Mets projected opening day tax payroll to $322.5M, second only to the #Dodgers ($382M)
As a team exceeding the highest penalty tier ($297 million), the Mets are subject to the humorously-coined [Steve] "Cohen Tax" surcharge of 110% on every dollar spent beyond that breakpoint.
For perspective, this tax bill alone exceeds the entire payrolls of the bottom six MLB teams: the Cleveland Guardians ($76.7 million), Tampa Bay Rays ($72.6 million), Pittsburgh Pirates ($69.9 million), Chicago White Sox ($61.2 million), Athletics ($54.1 million), and Miami Marlins ($43.6 million).
These five players alone account for about $158 million, or 49% of the team's payroll.
With owner Steve Cohen's unwavering commitment to bringing a World Series championship to Queens, the Mets' financial strategy is not just an expensive mix but a calculated investment. The long-term/guaranteed anchors position the club for a significant principal return on investment, while the short-term pop with a bit of risk involved could be an additional exciting spark. The extensive depth is an insurance hedge on the 162-game grind, reinforcing the Mets' intelligent (and financially savvy) edge in a competitive National League.
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