JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — General Manager James Gladstone has a math problem. When analyzing the Jacksonville Jaguars 2026 salary cap situation, the numbers paint a harsh reality. The NFL just pushed the league-wide cap past the $300 million mark, giving every front office a massive financial injection. Down in Duval County, however, the Jaguars are still drowning in the red. Following a dominant 13-4 run and an AFC South title in 2025, the bill has finally arrived. Trevor Lawrence and Josh Hines-Allen are eating massive chunks of the pie, while two-way sensation Travis Hunter looks to dominate his sophomore year under a $10.6 million hit.
The 10 Best Jaguars Under Contract in 2026
Forget the meaningless Madden ratings that amateur journalists obsess over. Games are won in the trenches and on the perimeter. Here are the ten most impactful Jaguars heading into the 2026 season, ordered by their current salary cap hit:
- Trevor Lawrence, QB ($24M)
- Josh Hines-Allen, EDGE ($23.4M)
- Arik Armstead, DL ($19.4M)
- Travon Walker, EDGE ($15.2M)
- DaVon Hamilton, DL ($12.4M)
- Travis Hunter, CB/WR ($10.6M)
- Cole Van Lanen, OL ($5.2M)
- Parker Washington, WR ($3.8M)
- Antonio Johnson, S ($1.2M)
- Cam Little, K ($1.1M)
Lawrence bounced back hard last season. He didn’t just manage games; he shredded defenses with ruthless precision. Behind him, the defensive front of Hines-Allen and Armstead terrorized opposing quarterbacks, forcing hasty throws and securing crucial third-down stops.
The Heaviest Cap Hits (and Dead Money Threats)
The league office blasted out the numbers Friday: the 2026 NFL salary cap will land between $301.2 million and $305.7 million. Assuming a $303.45 million baseline, Jacksonville sits roughly $12 million over the limit. Gladstone will undoubtedly maneuver money to open up breathing room before March free agency hits. If the front office decides to cut bait on a veteran, they swallow the dead cap. Here are the 10 highest cap hits for the 2026 Jaguars, with the dead money penalty sitting in parentheses:
- QB, Trevor Lawrence: $24M ($116.5M dead cap)
- EDGE, Josh Hines-Allen: $23.4M ($53.7M)
- DL, Arik Armstead: $19.4M ($17.1M)
- LB, Foyesade Oluokun: $16.9M ($14.3M)
- EDGE, Travon Walker: $15.2M ($15.2M)
- G, Patrick Mekari: $14.7M ($14.7M)
- T, Walker Little: $14.5M ($18.2M)
- DB, Jourdan Lewis: $12.8M ($14.7M)
- DL, DaVon Hamilton: $12.4M ($10.6M)
- CB/WR, Travis Hunter: $10.6M ($38.2M)
You can almost feel the tension radiating from the front office. Restructuring Foyesade Oluokun or Arik Armstead seems inevitable. Cutting Walker Little would only cost them more against the cap, meaning the offensive line core is firmly locked in.
“It’s a business, man. We all know the math. We built something special last year under Coach Coen, and now the front office has to figure out how to keep the band together so we can make that Super Bowl run.”
— Josh Hines-Allen, EDGE
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Jacksonville enters the 2026 offseason with a clear target on their backs. Houston is reloaded, and Indianapolis refuses to stay down. The Jaguars must clear space not just to survive, but to extend young core pieces like Travon Walker and Parker Washington. Expect the Jaguars to execute post-June 1 designations on aging veterans to split dead money across 2026 and 2027. If they clear the necessary $15 million, they can lock down free-agent cornerbacks to pair opposite Hunter, freeing him up to unleash his elite ball skills exclusively on an island.

