Explore the latest developments concerning Bills restructure Josh.
Bills restructure Josh Allen’s contract to create 2026 cap space
The Buffalo Bills made another move most felt was coming by restructuring Josh Allen’s contract on Wednesday. Allen enters the 2026 season in Year 9 of his NFL career, and Buffalo again leaned on the same cap adjustments it has used with several contracts: converting salary into signing bonus and spreading the charge across future years. His base salary drops to $1.3 million, while $15.2 million of the remaining salary is converted into bonus money.
That accounting move lowers Allen’s 2026 salary cap hit to $44.2 million, creating $12 million in immediate cap savings for the Bills. In practical terms, Buffalo pushes the immediate hit across future seasons, buying breathing room today while increasing the dead cap charge later.
Bills Could Make Major Josh Allen Move to Create Offseason Flexibility
The first few rounds of the NFL legal tampering period are underway, and the Buffalo Bills have made some key moves, bringing significant players onto their roster while also finalizing deals with several players already on the team.
A few of the players the Bills re-signed include center Connor McGovern, who they agreed to a four-year, $52 million deal on Saturday, and tight end Dawson Knox, who signed a three-year extension on Tuesday.
The Bills have also implemented restructuring moves involving tackle Spencer Brown, defensive tackle Ed Oliver and kicker Tyler Bass, who took a pay cut. According to NFL insider Dianna Russini and Bills writer Joe Buscaglia from The Athletic, there’s buzz that Josh Allen might restructure his contract as well, potentially opening up around $12 million in cap space.
1 Piece Two-Hand Rotating Fishing Reel, He1000-7000 Series, 5.2:1 Gear Ratio, 22.05lb Extraction, Smooth and Sensitive Aluminum Alloy Body, Pa Nylon, Left/Right Hands Can Be Changed, Suitable for Freshwater and Saltwater
Bills cuts tracker and contract changes as GM adjusts for salary cap
As usual, as the start of the new league year dawns, the Buffalo Bills are over the salary cap threshold which has now been officially set at $301.2 million.
It’s an annual exercise for Brandon Beane and the bean counters at One Bills Drive to not only get compliant before the 4 p.m. March 11 kickoff to free agency, but create enough cap space to actually go shopping once the bell rings.
“There's not just one line of plan,” Beane said last week at the scouting combine. “I've sat down with Kevin Meganck (the Bills’ vice president of football administration who plays a key role in the salary cap manipulation). Kevin does a great job, and we've kind of talked about Plan A can give you this, Plan B, maybe there's a combination of that.”
For more detailed information, explore updates concerning Bills restructure Josh.






















0 Comments