NEW YORK — The 52-hour legal tampering window is wide open. At noon EDT today, the league flipped the switch on the 2026 NFL Free Agency period. General managers are officially allowed to negotiate with the agents of unrestricted free agents. No contracts can be signed until the new league year officially begins at 4 p.m. EDT on Wednesday. Teams are flush with cash. The NFL salary cap rocketed to a record $301.2 million, a massive $22 million spike from last year, creating an arms race for premium talent.
Big Names, Bigger Wallets
You want star power? You got it. Fresh off a dazzling performance, Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III hits the open market at the absolute peak of his value. He joins six-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Mike Evans and relentless edge rusher Trey Hendrickson as the elite tier of available talent. Expect bidding wars.
The quarterback carousel is also spinning violently. Teams looking for a veteran trigger-man have two sudden, high-profile options. Both Kirk Cousins and Kyler Murray are packing their bags, preparing for imminent releases from their respective clubs. Their sudden availability reshuffles the draft strategy for half the league.
The Tag Game
Front offices didn’t let everyone walk. The March 3 franchise tag deadline locked up some serious offensive firepower. The Cowboys kept wide receiver George Pickens out of enemy hands. The Falcons secured tight end Kyle Pitts, and the Jets held onto running back Breece Hall. All three received the nonexclusive franchise tag, meaning a rival team can still pry them away, but it will cost them two first-round draft picks.
Meanwhile, the Colts took a different route with Daniel Jones. They slapped the quarterback with the transition tag. Indianapolis holds the right of first refusal to match any outside offer, but they get zero draft compensation if they let him walk.
“The cap went up, but the price of winning went up right with it. You either open the checkbook for the right guy, or you watch your rival hold the Lombardi. We aren’t here to window shop.”
— Anonymous NFL General Manager, AFC East
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The next 52 hours will dictate the balance of power for the 2026-2027 season. The jump to a $301.2 million salary cap—combined with the ability to roll over 100% of unused 2025 space—means bottom-dwelling teams can buy instant credibility. If a contender secures Walker III or Hendrickson, they instantly patch their biggest holes without sacrificing draft capital. Teams releasing expensive veterans like Murray and Cousins are eating dead money now to clear the decks for massive rebuilds. Every handshake agreement leaked between now and Wednesday afternoon sends a direct ripple through the current draft order and divisional odds.

