MLB's agent class is pricing the next free-agent cycle at $600 million minimum for top-tier players, according to insider forecasts released this week. Tigers right-hander Tarik Skubal and Astros outfielder Kyle Tucker are the lead names, both entering their final arbitration years before unrestricted deals in 2026. The math is straightforward: Shohei Ohtani's $700 million Dodgers contract reset the ceiling in December 2023, and Juan Soto is expected to clear $600 million this winter.
The shift reflects MLB's revenue arc and deferral creativity. League-wide revenue hit $11.6 billion in 2023, up 4.1% year-over-year, with RSN restructuring pushing more dollars into central streaming deals. Teams now treat mega-contracts as balance-sheet engineering, not payroll risk. Ohtani's structure—$680 million deferred at 0% interest over 10 years—carries a present value near $460 million, functionally a $46 million AAV against the luxury tax. Agents are modeling Tucker and Skubal in the $55-60 million annual range, knowing half can be deferred and discounted.
Skubal is the cleaner comp. He's 27, posted a 2.39 ERA across 192 innings in 2024, struck out 228, and won the AL Cy Young. His agent, Scott Boras, has placed three pitchers above $300 million (Gerrit Cole at $324 million, Max Scherzer at $130 million in his age-30 deal before topping it at 33). Tucker is 28 in March, a career .277/.361/.500 hitter with 29 homers in 2024 and Gold Glove defense. His comparable is Soto, minus the plate discipline and plus the glove. Soto's bidding is expected to start at $600 million when he signs in mid-December; Tucker's floor will be that number in two years if he stays healthy.
What changes is the buyer pool. The Dodgers, Mets, and Yankees have shown they'll lever up for talent, but the Phillies, Giants, and Rangers are now modeling 10-year, $500 million frameworks into their 2026-2028 windows. Ownership groups that entered MLB in the past 36 months—including Steve Cohen's Mets purchase at $2.4 billion and the Orioles' expected sale near $2 billion—are underwriting these deals as appreciation plays, not P&L decisions. Private equity's creep into minority stakes (Arctos holds pieces of the Dodgers, Cubs, and Red Sox) adds another marginal buyer at each bidding table.
The risk is performance cliff. Cole signed at 32 and posted a 2.63 ERA in year one, then a 3.41 ERA at 33. Scherzer signed his $130 million deal at 30, was elite through 36, then fell apart. Skubal hits free agency at 28; Tucker at 29. Both are betting on aging curves that didn't exist when Albert Pujols signed his 10-year, $240 million Angels deal at 32 and collapsed by year four. The new contracts assume excellence through age 35, then accept diminishing returns as the cost of locking in prime years.
Watch Soto's signing structure in December—his deferral percentage and luxury-tax hit set the template for Skubal and Tucker. Both players' arbitration filings in January 2025 will signal floor AAV expectations. And the 2025 trade deadline will clarify which contenders are clearing 2026 payroll space now: the Padres, Braves, and Astros all have stars earning $25-30 million annually whose extensions may not pencil if they're reserving room for a $60 million replacement.
The Orioles are the tell. They haven't spent in free agency under current ownership, but they're selling the team, Gunnar Henderson is 24 and controllable through 2029, and Baltimore's RSN just collapsed. The new owner will either build around Henderson with a Tucker-tier signing in 2026, or flip the roster and tank the valuation. Agent chatter suggests the former, which means at least one more $600 million bidder enters the market by next winter.