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Auggie

(33,220 posts)
Fri Apr 17, 2026, 08:42 AM Friday

Dodgers smashed MLB's spending record at $515M in 2025

(AP) April 16, 2026

NEW YORK -- The Dodgers shattered Major League Baseball's spending record with a combined $515 million in payroll and luxury tax last year en route to their second straight World Series title, according to final figures compiled by the commissioner's office, and Los Angeles is projected for the highest total again in 2026.

Los Angeles' 2025 spending included records for payroll at $345.3 million and tax of $169.4 million for a total of $514.7 million. Despite several contracts discounted to reflect deferred payments, the Dodgers' total was seven times the $68.7 million payroll of the Miami Marlins, the lowest-spending team, and more than the payrolls of the bottom six clubs combined.

Spending by the Dodgers last year topped the previous high of $430.4 million by the 2024 New York Mets -- and Los Angeles' total didn't include the $6.5 million signing bonus given to pitcher Roki Sasaki as part of a minor league contract.

SNIP

Los Angeles' total would have been about $71 million higher but for the use of deferred money for seven players that resulted in discounting for their payroll calculations. Shohei Ohtani counts at $28.2 million because $68 million of his $70 million salary last year isn't due until 2035.

FULL STORY: https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/48502875/dodgers-smashed-mlb-spending-record-515m-2025

Who else is paying luxury tax, you ask?

According to the link, "seven teams (other than the Dodgers) began 2026 over the $244 million tax threshold. The Dodgers ($415.2 million), Mets ($379.2 million) and New York Yankees ($339.6 million) were followed by Toronto ($319.5 million), Philadelphia ($315.2 million), Boston ($263.7 million), San Diego ($260.1 million) and Atlanta ($247.9 million).


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Auggie

(33,220 posts)
2. Yes, yes, yes ...
Fri Apr 17, 2026, 09:29 AM
Friday

Just wondering how it could be implemented with so much money on the books for years to come? It would have to start maybe 10 years from now so teams could phase it in.

But it's not going to happen: Players Union won't let it.

What could happen, IMO: small market teams will have to move to larger markets. Mexico City, Montreal, Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Charlotte ...

chicoescuela

(3,132 posts)
5. You're right, union will not go for it until competition is way out of control.
Sat Apr 18, 2026, 12:03 AM
Saturday

Probably more than 10 years out

Gore1FL

(22,962 posts)
4. Instead of salary caps, we need tax brackets that account for absurdly high salaries.
Fri Apr 17, 2026, 10:08 AM
Friday

If they make $40,000,000 a year, tax 39,000,000 at 75%.

The taxation solution will cover more than baseball salaries and fund programs needed by the citizenry.

Chasstev365

(7,939 posts)
3. Franchises like Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, and Milwaukee won't survive if the Dodgers continue to spend this recklessly
Fri Apr 17, 2026, 09:48 AM
Friday

It's not just a salary cap that's needed; Baseball needs to lose it's antitrust exemption.

Capt. America

(2,572 posts)
6. Not being sarcastic at all...explain how that would make a better competitive balance? I am curious.
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 12:10 AM
Yesterday

Chasstev365

(7,939 posts)
7. Economic Imbalance
Sun Apr 19, 2026, 07:31 AM
21 hrs ago

For one thing, Dodgers are over paying their players such high saleries that other teams won't be able to afford even average players because they generate so little revenue from attendance to TV rights compared to LA.

https://sports.yahoo.com/article/shaikin-mlb-owners-lopsided-spending-110000361.html

https://biz.chosun.com/en/en-sports/2026/01/18/OVCVKMVAWFA3PI52DM4DZJESCI/

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