
Kyle Pitts has a new deal.
The Atlanta Falcons signed their tight end to a three-year extension worth $53 million in base value, replacing the one-year franchise tag that would have paid him $15.045 million for 2026.
The deal makes Pitts one of the highest-paid tight ends in the league, and commits Atlanta to a player who has not yet fully delivered on the promise of his rookie season.
The structure starts with a $16.785 million signing bonus, followed by a 2026 base salary of $1.215 million, which is fully guaranteed. The fully guaranteed portion covers the first two years: $36 million locked in through 2027, including a $16.49 million option bonus and $1.26 million base salary for that season.
The third year includes a $13.36 million option bonus, a $1.39 million base salary, and a per-game roster bonus of up to $1 million, none of which is guaranteed. Atlanta can walk away after two years without additional exposure, or commit to the full three at a cost approaching $18 million annually if all four performance escalators are hit.
Those escalators are tied to Pro Bowl or All-Pro selections in 2026 and 2027, and to hitting 80 catches or 900 receiving yards in either season. Without them, the base average sits at $17.66 million per year. NBC Sports laid out the full structure in detail.
Pitts effectively traded the franchise tag, and a potential second tag worth a combined $33.099 million over two years, for $36 million fully guaranteed and a shot at the escalators. On pure guaranteed money, he came out ahead. Whether he earns the rest remains to be seen.
Matt Ryan, Pitts’s quarterback when Pitts was a rookie in 2021, approved this deal as Atlanta’s president of football operations. That detail is worth noting: the person who knows firsthand what Pitts looked like at his best is the one who signed off.
Atlanta has made clear it is not in a rebuilding phase. It is trying to win now, and understanding the pressure that creates is part of what makes high-stakes NFL contract decisions consequential.
If Pitts produces like the tight end Atlanta drafted in 2021, this contract will look like a bargain.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!