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Travis Kelce's New Three-Year Deal Isn't What It Seems
© Amy Kontras-Imagn Images

NFL fans may have been surprised to see the Kansas City Chiefs sign Travis Kelce to a three-year deal. However, the contract doesn't increase the odds of the tight end staying around that long.

Kelce signed a three-year, $54.7 million deal to return to Kansas City, but it will effectively function as a one-year agreement.

The 11-time Pro Bowler will make $12 million fully guaranteed in 2026. According to Pro Football Talk's Mike Florio, that includes $6 million in game roster bonuses, a $3 million base salary, and a $3 million reporting bonus for training camp.

The contract also contains a poison pill Kansas City will almost certainly avoid. While he has a minimum base salary for 2027 and 2028, a massive $40 million roster bonus becomes fully guaranteed on June 7, 2027.

The Chiefs gave Kelce a three-year deal for salary cap purposes, but the contract shouldn't remain in effect beyond the 2026 campaign.

Explaining Kelce's new deal


© Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images

Florio noted how the contract benefits Kansas City beyond cap savings. If Kelce forgoes retirement again, the Chiefs will have a longer window to exclusively negotiate a new deal with their three-time Super Bowl champion.

"It essentially gives the Chiefs extended dibs on keeping Kelce in 2027, if he decides to play another year," Florio wrote. "And it gives both sides three extra months after the start of the league year to figure something out, while also keeping Kelce off the open market."

Despite Kelce earning half of his 2026 earnings through per-game bonuses, Florio explained that the 36-year-old will still be paid if he doesn't play every week. Kansas City will pay him $352,941 per game even if he's injured, withholding payments only if he's placed on the non-football illness/injury list.

Kelce can also earn up to an additional $3 million if he meets incentives. He'll receive $750,000 if Kansas City makes the playoffs after he plays in 60 percent of the snaps, $1 million if logging 70 percent of the snaps with a playoff berth, and $2 million if seeing the field on 80 percent of the playoff squad's offensive snaps.

He'd make an extra $1 million if the Chiefs make the Super Bowl after he played 70 percent of their snaps during the regular season.

Kelce returns to Kansas City for a 14th season after recording 76 catches for 851 yards and five touchdowns in 2025. The Chiefs missed the playoffs for the first time since 2014 after going 6-11.

This article first appeared on The Spun and was syndicated with permission.

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