
The Chicago Bears are dealing with more than just a roster shakeup after Drew Dalman’s shocking retirement at age 27.
They’re now navigating the salary cap consequences of it.
Using Dalman’s contract details from Spotrac, here’s exactly how his retirement reshapes Chicago’s 2026 financial picture.
Dalman signed a 3-year, $42 million contract with Chicago in 2025 that included:
Because signing bonuses are spread (“prorated”) across the life of the contract for cap purposes, that money doesn’t disappear when a player retires. It accelerates.
Dalman was scheduled to carry a significant 2026 cap hit, driven largely by:
With his retirement, the Bears immediately remove his 2026 base salary from the cap. That portion becomes cap relief.
However, the remaining unamortized signing bonus now accelerates onto the 2026 salary cap.
Based on the structure of Dalman’s deal:
The result: Chicago saves Dalman’s base salary but absorbs accelerated bonus money in one lump sum.
The Bears are unlikely to see full relief equal to Dalman’s scheduled 2026 cap hit.
Instead, the more realistic outcome is:
In other words, 2026 absorbs the pain, but long-term flexibility improves.
The bigger issue isn’t just dead money. Instead, it’s the cost to find a replacement for Dalman.
Center is one of the most important positions in football, especially for a young quarterback. If general manager Ryan Poles now has to:
Any cap savings created by Dalman’s retirement could be quickly reallocated.
Dalman’s retirement:
The cap hit is manageable, but the impact on the Chicago Bears’ lineup might not be.
Chicago now faces a sudden void in the middle of its offensive line, and how the Bears replace Dalman is the biggest question of the 2026 offseason.
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