
The Denver Broncos are finally free from a historic financial nightmare. Speaking at the end of week 1 of OTAs in June 2026, head coach Sean Payton made it clear that the dark cloud of crippling dead money has officially vanished.
“It feels good. It’s important. It’s hard to do that with dead money, and when you do it with a record-setting amount, it’s a credit to everyone: the young players, coaches, scouts,” Sean Payton told the reporters. “So I don’t know that anyone can physically feel it or see it, but certainly it exists when it pertains to your budget.”
Payton isn’t treating this like some boring accounting adjustment, it is a major operational victory. It signals a massive milestone for the entire organization.
When Denver cut QB Russell Wilson ahead of the 2024 season, they absorbed an unprecedented $85 million dead cap penalty.
The front office chewed through that historic ledger across two painful league years, taking a $53 million hit followed by $32 million.
The Broncos have officially hit an epic turnaround as of now. Ranking 31st in the NFL with a mere $3.41 million left on their dead cap ledger. They climbed out from the absolute bottom to hold the second-lowest dead money total in football.
This clean slate gives Denver a highly comfortable $26.23 million in active salary cap space.
The front office freed up even more cash with some clever roster moves. By cutting linebacker Dre Greenlaw with a ‘post-June 1’ tag, they instantly saved $8.19 million for 2026 while taking on a tiny $2.17 million penalty.
This newly unearthed money is already filtering directly into the locker room.
The team proactively handed superstar cornerback Patrick Surtain II a heavy $5 million base salary raise for the 2026 campaign.
The reworked deal also features an extra $5 million in performance incentives tied to All-Pro or Pro Bowl honors.
“It was definitely an adjustment. He’s obviously someone that we feel like is elite and at the top of his position,” Sean Payton explained the forward-thinking adjustment by addressing the booming cornerback market. “Part of that is the salary cap, and how that fluctuates and moves, especially in the last three years.”
The true baseline for this entire financial transformation is quarterback Bo Nix. Entering the third year of his rookie-scale contract, Nix carries an incredibly affordable cap hit.
This low-cost window gives GM George Paton and Payton an open, multi-year runway to aggressively pursue elite additions and sustain a competitive roster.
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