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49ers confident in salary cap health following offseason overhaul
Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

The San Francisco 49ers entered the 2025 offseason with a clear plan: reshape the roster while maintaining long-term financial flexibility. That meant saying goodbye to several key veterans and leaning on the NFL Draft to inject youth into the roster.

"I'm not going to lie to you ... It wasn't easy, in free agency, seeing a lot of good players go out the door," general manager John Lynch said during a recent interview on Bay Area radio station KNBR, "but somewhat intentional that we needed to infuse some youth."

The 49ers also doubled down on their commitment to cornerstone players, inking contract extensions with quarterback Brock Purdy, tight end George Kittle, and linebacker Fred Warner. Kittle and Warner are now the highest-paid players at their respective positions, while Purdy became the highest-paid player in franchise history.

"If you're going to have this highly compensated of a core," Lynch explained, "and this quality of a core, with really good players—the Kittles, the Warners, the Trent Williams, the Christian McCaffreys, the Purdys—you have to supplement that. The draft is a way to go to balance that out."

Much of the team's offseason planning was centered around the implications of Purdy's new deal. With their franchise quarterback no longer on a rookie contract, the 49ers could no longer lean on that cap flexibility that allowed them to spend heavily elsewhere.

Despite this shift, the 49ers remain in strong financial shape. San Francisco currently has over $50 million in salary cap space, including nearly $44 million in effective cap space (top 51 rule). That figure will dip slightly when the post-June 1 trade for defensive end Bryce Huff becomes official and his salary is added to the books.

While a portion of that cap space is earmarked for the future, Lynch is confident in the team's long-term financial health.

When asked whether the 49ers had backed themselves into "salary cap hell," Lynch pushed back.

"Not at all," he responded. "Now, I've seen some stuff in the last couple of days that say we have the second-most room. We always look at cap over a three-year window, so I would tell people, some of the room we've created for '25 is because '26 and '27 is going to be extremely tight."

NFL teams are allowed to roll over unused cap space from one year to the next—something Lynch says the team fully intends to do.

"But, in general, our salary cap health is in a good place," Lynch concluded. "Jed and the York family has committed to being an aggressive team, and we're appreciative of that. We'll continue to be that. But also mindful of keeping our roster, our cap situation in good health, and I think we've done that.
We've managed to do that, and now, we've just got to go win games."

This article first appeared on 49ers Webzone and was syndicated with permission.

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