Negotiators for Major League Baseball and the Players Association sat down Tuesday in New York, 195 days before the current collective bargaining agreement expires December 1, 2026. The early start—previous rounds began 90-120 days out—signals both sides want terms locked before the 2027 broadcast landscape clarifies and before another spring training work stoppage costs the league $800M-$1.1B in gate and sponsor revenue.
The current deal, signed after a 99-day lockout in 2022, runs through five seasons. League revenues have grown 11.3% annually since, crossing $12.5B in 2024, driven by national media rights, gambling integrations, and Nike's $1B kit deal. Players captured 56.1% of that growth through competitive balance tax escalators and minimum salary bumps to $780,000. The union wants that ratio codified. Ownership wants flexibility to redirect revenue toward international player development and to carve out gambling and technology income from the player pool.
Three pressure points explain the calendar. First, Apple holds an exclusive negotiating window for a streaming package starting January 2027, and the league wants labor certainty before that conversation reaches numbers. Second, 14 teams are still mid-litigation or mid-renegotiation with bankrupt regional sports networks, and volatile local media income makes both sides wary of hard salary floors or ceilings tied to last year's assumptions. Third, the league office is preparing a formal bid for the 2032 Olympics baseball tournament, which requires a clean labor picture for IOC and sponsor signoff.
Ownership will push to expand the postseason to 14 teams (from 12), which adds $240M in gate and rights fees but dilutes individual playoff shares. They'll also propose a global draft covering international amateurs, which the union has resisted for two decades because it eliminates bidding wars for 16-year-old Dominican shortstops. The players want a higher competitive balance tax threshold—currently $241M—and faster salary arbitration eligibility, letting pre-arbitration stars reach market faster. Cooper Pratt's $140M extension with Atlanta, signed before he played a major league inning, is now Exhibit A in the union's case that teams profit from suppressed early-career wages.
The negotiation's tell will be how quickly both sides move past symbolic proposals. If real numbers appear before the Winter Meetings in December, the deal closes by June. If posturing lasts into spring training camps, expect another February lockout and $3.2B in cascade losses when sponsors pull activation spend and local vendors go unpaid.
Watch for movement on three fronts: whether the union accepts any international draft structure in exchange for a $260M CBT threshold; whether owners agree to shorten the arbitration clock to two years of service (from three); and whether either side proposes a formal revenue-sharing formula that treats gambling and streaming income separately. The next negotiating session is scheduled for late June, after the draft, when both sides will have fresh financial projections and when the Apple window is six months closer.