PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers enter the 2026 offseason with a new regime under Mike McCarthy and a massive decision on the horizon. Joey Porter Jr. didn’t just survive the 2025 season; he erased it for every receiver he shadowed. After allowing zero touchdowns on 67 targets last year, the Penn State product has officially outgrown his rookie contract. With the market for elite cornerbacks now clearing the $30 million per year mark, the clock is ticking for General Manager Omar Khan to put a pen in Porter’s hand.
The Shutdown Era: Why Porter Jr. Is Indispensable
While the 2025 season saw veterans like Jalen Ramsey shift to safety and Darius Slay Jr. exit via waivers, Porter Jr. stood as the lone pillar of consistency in the secondary. He logged 14 games of lockdown film, surrendering a meager 325 yards all season. Opposing quarterbacks found more success throwing the ball into the Allegheny River than targeting number 24. He didn’t just keep the “paint” clean; he locked the doors and took the keys.
The Steelers’ secondary depth is currently paper-thin. Aside from Porter, the roster lacks a proven outside starter who can go toe-to-toe with the AFC North’s elite wideouts. Letting Porter even sniff the open market in 2027 would be a catastrophic failure for a defense that relies on his ability to island the opponent’s best weapon.
Setting the 2026 Cornerback Market
The financial goalposts moved significantly last summer. Sauce Gardner reset the standard with a $120.4 million extension, closely followed by Derek Stingley Jr. and Jaycee Horn. If the Steelers wait until midway through the 2026 season, Porter’s price tag will only climb as the salary cap continues its upward surge. A deal in the $26M to $28M AAV range right now might actually look like a bargain by this time next year.
“Three years, no touchdowns! Y’all favorite wide receivers can never say they touch paint with me. My dad told me what the value is, and I know what I bring to this city.”
— Joey Porter Jr., Steelers Cornerback (via Instagram)
What’s Next for the Steelers Defense
Extending Porter is the first domino in what could be a transformational offseason. With Aaron Rodgers mulling a return for one last ride in 2026, the Steelers need to ensure their defense remains a top-10 unit to support a Super Bowl window. Securing Porter allows McCarthy and new defensive coordinator Patrick Graham to build a scheme that isn’t constantly worried about a vertical breakdown. If Khan can’t find common ground soon, expect the franchise tag conversation to dominate the local airwaves by July.

