
This is a guest article by Curtis Allen…
The Seahawks stand in a very good position with their salary cap. They currently have a Zen-like balance on the roster — featuring a mix of productive young players and veterans who set the pace for the team while carrying cap numbers that are not debilitating.
Added to that, they have cap space to pay the bills and add or further retain talent without putting much strain on the company credit card.
To be in such an advantageous position right after winning the Super Bowl is a major testament to the way John Schneider and the rest of the Front Office have coalesced with the coaching staff.
A brief overview of the near future bears that out. We will start with the basics and then talk about options and decisions that need to be made.
The 2026 Salary Cap
OvertheCap.com currently has them with $32.74 million. They estimate it will cost them about $3.4 million to sign their draft class, leaving them with a little over $29 million of room.
Earmarking the standard $10 million for the Practice Squad and injury replacement players, that leaves them with about $19 million free and clear to spend.
The addition of Dante Fowler Jr for a reported “up to” $5 million number is a brilliant depth move that effectively replaces Boye Mafe in terms of production at a very reasonable cost.
If we count the full value of that contract towards the cap, that takes the number down to $15 million ($5 million cap hit + $1 million they get back for kicking player #51 off the top 51 that count towards the cap).
The other primary move that most likely will happen is the extension of Devon Witherspoon. The Seahawks picked up their fifth-year option for 2027 at $21 million and intend to work out a contract extension.
Witherspoon currently accounts for $10.13 million on the 2026 cap. As a #5 overall pick, his cap number is a healthy one for the fourth year of his contract.
As an exercise, I took the Trent McDuffie contract (4y/$134m), gave it to Witherspoon and modeled it after Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s deal:

So even if he becomes the highest-paid corner in the league, with the Seahawks structuring his contract similarly to Smith-Njigba’s, it will only eat about $2 million more for 2026.
That leaves the Seahawks with about $13 million to spend.
One option to explore if they wish: They can easily pick up another $8.25 million or so in cap room with a simple restructuring of Sam Darnold’s contract. This could be for a specific purpose, or just to give John Schneider the capacity to make one of his patented in-season value trades to address a need. If they do not use that space, they can just roll it into 2027 and apply it as they wish.
Just to reiterate: Bringing back every critical element from your Championship team, extending your core players, drafting to fill key needs, collecting compensatory picks, adding that one-more-veteran from the marketplace and still having cap room left over for the year is tremendous work.
The 2027 Cap
Currently OTC has the Seahawks’ number at $54.58 million with 35 players under contract.
That number does not include:
— Any cap rolled over from 2026
— The 2026 rookie class salaries
— Any cap adjustments resulting from the Witherspoon extension
— Any new contracts or adjustments made this summer or fall
The cap charges for the ’26 rookie class will be about $12 million in 2027. That leaves about $42.5 million left with 43 players under contract.
Another draft class will likely clock in around the same, about $12 million. That leaves about $30 million of room with the full 51 players.
(As a side note – let’s just tuck the projected eleven draft picks for 2027 – twelve if Defensive Coordinator Aden Durde is hired as a Head Coach – in our back pocket for now. Having that many choices in a strong draft with a roster already loaded is like playing with a whole extra pile of money.)
To know: that 2027 number includes a $21 million cap hit for Witherspoon’s fifth year option. From the above, I estimated the team saves about $8.7 million with the extension and structuring, so call that about $38 million in cap room before the September costs for the Practice Squad.
Key Unrestricted Free Agents include Leonard Williams, Derick Hall, Uchenna Nwosu, Dante Fowler, Zach Charbonnet, Anthony Bradford and Jason Myers.
Jalen Sundell will be a Restricted Free Agent. The Seahawks will almost certainly tender him barring something drastic happening this year.
Also — DeMarcus Lawrence is under contract but his 2027 is undetermined.
That $38 million can be used to extend or replace nearly all those players.
They also have levers they can pull to create much more cap space. Two straightforward methods: Extending or restructuring Sam Darnold’s contract and Cooper Kupp has $14 million in non-guaranteed money on his 2027 number. They could more than double their available space with moves on these two players alone.
Later in the year, they can consider extending Ernest Jones Jr and Julian Love, both of whom will still be under age 30. That will make a healthy portion of salary cap room.
This is a snapshot of what will be on the menu when 2027 comes around. Much can and will change between now and then.
Conclusions
The Seahawks are in a very sweet spot. They have a championship roster, featuring a Quarterback on a bargain contract, an Offensive Line that is both young and team-controlled for the near future, a Wide Receiver coming off an Offensive Player of the Year campaign, a defense blended with a mix of youth, experience and toughness led by a Head Coach who is confounding some of the league’s best offensive minds. It is all tied together by a reasonably-priced depth chart that is one of the NFL’s best Special Teams units.
In years past, Seahawk teams were loaded down by ‘comatose cap space’ — players on the roster with sizable cap hits that could not provide the value they were signed for. Those days are done.
The team ethos, the blend of talent, the coaching, and the contract constructions are working together beautifully.
Would it be ideal for the team to have more cap space? Sure. More cap space is fun.
But this saying comes to mind: ‘A ship is safe in the harbor but that is not what ships are for.’
Having a large bank of cap space on a spreadsheet is fun. But that is not what cap space is for. Its purpose is to be spent wisely on quality players. It is a ‘good problem’ when you must maneuver your cap space a bit and choose between bringing back players or taking the compensatory pick because of having so many quality players on your team.
That is where John Schneider has led the Seahawks.
And we can trust he will continue to recognize core needs for the team and successfully address them.
Speaking of core needs…
The Challenge of the Defensive Line in 2027
It has not escaped anyone’s notice that as of this moment, Leonard Williams, Derick Hall, Dante Fowler and Uchenna Nwosu are not under contract for next season. Add to that the uncertainty over DeMarcus Lawrence and that Jarran Reed may need to start rationing snaps to stay fresh and it is currently an area of real concern.
If Lawrence decides to retire that will open $20 million in cap space ($9.5m this year, $10.5m next year) that can be directly applied to filling his spot. I think everyone involved or interested in the team would rather have Lawrence than the cap space but the situation still needs to be played out.
Nwosu played his first full season after back-to-back injury-shortened years and played well but seemed to fade a bit down the stretch, recording only 1.5 sacks and eight pressures in the last nine games of the season (although he did clinch the Super Bowl win with a huge play).
John Schneider indicated to Brady Henderson that the team will not work to adjust his contract this year, perhaps feeling they want to wait and see how he responds to a ‘finally healthy offseason’ and then decide what to do.
That leaves Williams and Hall. If those two were secured beyond this season, that would lend a great deal of stability and continuity to the defensive front. The team would not need to rebuild one of the most important position groups on the roster and could rather focus on only supplementing it with further moves.
Assuming both are agreeable to signing extensions and Williams wants to continue playing, could the team work out something with both that is equitable and makes sense with their current cap situation?
Absolutely yes.
In fact, rather than being a burden, extending Williams could provide the opportunity to improve the Seahawks’ cap outlook for this year and next year. Let me illustrate.
Earlier this year, I proposed a two-year $40 million extension for Williams. You can read my reasoning on it here.
Currently, Williams has a big $29.6 million cap hit for 2026 and $9.37 million in 2027 for dead money that hits the cap when his contract voids on February 20 (more on that in a minute).
An extension retains a core player, evens out the cap burden and – maybe most importantly – is cash-neutral for 2026. It also provides the kind of flexibility and options that the Seahawks need to continue to make beneficial moves as they see fit.
Have a look:

The $40 million is split between salary for 2027-28, the per game roster bonuses and a $15 million roster bonus that hits early 2027.
We convert the bulk of Williams’ 2026 salary to a signing bonus and add two void years to spread out the cost. That takes his cap number down by $11.6 million this year, giving the team the flexibility to use that for further moves or to simply roll it into 2027.
Currently, the cash layout for Williams this year is $16.65 million ($15.8 million salary and $850k for PG roster bonus). This extension keeps the layout the same amount, just changes the proportions ($1.3 million salary, $14.5 million bonus and $850k for PG roster bonus).
This is important to the team, as they have spent a ton of cash this year and will very likely end up in the top-three in the NFL once Witherspoon’s extension (and maybe Hall’s as well) is worked out.
2027 is also set up nicely. A juicy $15 million roster bonus is there as a nice carrot for Williams to consider when deciding whether to keep playing. It also could help the Seahawks’ offseason planning, since a roster bonus comes with a trigger date.
It also takes advantage of the $9.37 million in void money and spreads it out to even out the impact. If they can agree to this extension before February 20 (or mutually agree to push out the void date like the Eagles did with Dallas Goedert’s contract), they can defer $4.68 million to 2028 and lessen the cap charge.
The result is an impact to the cap of “only” $23.06 million in 2027. If you consider the cumulative change to the cap in both years, the additional impact is $11.46 million. A small price to pay for a player of Williams’ stature.
And further, the Seahawks can easily convert the 2027 Roster Bonus to a Signing Bonus and split out the impact over the rest of the contract, making 2026-27 nearly cap-neutral:

In this scenario, if Williams retires in 2028, $24.6 million dead money is left and can be split between 2028 and 2029. The Seahawks pick up about $14 million in 2028 cap room.
The point being the Seahawks can retain Williams without significantly impacting their ability to make other moves. It just takes both parties to work together to make it happen.
Compared to Williams, Derick Hall’s contract is straightforward. He will be coming off his rookie contract, and the Seahawks can easily make it workable for both parties.
I gave Hall a three-year, $70 million contract with an $18 million signing bonus. Boye Mafe got $60 million over three years from Cincinnati in Free Agency and it is clear the Seahawks value Hall more than Mafe. A nice bump helps him sign now and not be tempted by a crazy market in 2027. He also lines himself up for another very healthy contract at age 28 or 29:

As you can see, the cap impact to 2026 is easily affordable for the team. 2027 is not terribly prohibitive and even 2028 is not too heavy.
Getting Williams and Hall to sign extensions would be another very good day’s work for the team. It would build continuity on the defense and ensure that key players like Devon Witherspoon, Byron Murphy and Nick Emmanwori can deliver the maximum impact possible.
All of this is possible due to the strategic handling of their cap and contracts, married to a coaching staff that knows how to deliver the best from the players provided to them.