Saquon Barkley structured his three-year, $37.75 million contract with the Philadelphia Eagles to include an equity component in the franchise, according to people familiar with the terms. The deal, signed in March 2024, makes Barkley the first active NFL player to negotiate measurable ownership as part of his compensation package.
The equity portion represents a small but non-trivial stake, valued in the low seven figures at signing. It vests over the contract term and includes tag-along rights if Jeffrey Lurie sells the team. The arrangement required league approval under NFL ownership rules, which typically restrict active players from holding franchise stakes. League office quietly signed off in February after reviewing precedent from European soccer leagues where player-ownership hybrids have existed since the mid-2010s.
The structure matters for three groups. First, team operators facing cap constraints now have a blueprint to defer compensation outside the $224.8 million salary cap ceiling. Second, agents representing top-tier clients can point to Barkley's deal as comp precedent in negotiations, particularly for players whose brand value exceeds their position's market rate. Running backs, historically suppressed in contract value, gain leverage if equity becomes table stakes. Third, private equity firms circling NFL minority stakes suddenly see a new liquidity event: players cashing out small ownership positions could create a secondary market for fractional franchise interests.
The Eagles' willingness to pioneer this structure reflects Jeffrey Lurie's background in private equity and his relationship with Jeff Bezos, who has explored NFL ownership paths since 2019. Lurie personally negotiated the equity terms with Barkley's representation over a three-week period in January, using a valuation framework borrowed from venture-backed company stock option grants. The team valued itself at $8.1 billion for purposes of the calculation, roughly $600 million above Forbes' most recent public estimate.
Barkley's camp pursued the equity angle after studying NBA players who have taken stakes in teams post-retirement. But the running back wanted ownership concurrent with his playing prime, when his leverage peaks. His agent used the threat of a one-year prove-it deal elsewhere to force the equity conversation. The Eagles initially offered a performance escalator tied to playoff yardage; Barkley's side countered with the ownership proposal, which Lurie accepted within 72 hours.
The deal also includes standard contract language—$26 million guaranteed, per-game roster bonuses, workout clauses—but the equity component sits in a separate side letter that doesn't appear in NFLPA filings. This structure keeps the ownership terms private while satisfying league disclosure requirements. Only four people outside Barkley's inner circle have seen the full document: Lurie, the Eagles' CFO, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, and the league's outside counsel at Covington & Burling.
Two other NFL players have since approached their teams about similar arrangements, according to league sources. One is a franchise-tagged edge rusher on a West Coast team; the other is a Pro Bowl offensive lineman negotiating an extension in the NFC South. Neither team has agreed to equity terms yet, but both are running financial models on how to structure ownership without violating league rules or creating tax complications.
Watch for the NFL's next ownership policy update, expected before the May owners' meetings. The league office is drafting guidance on player equity stakes, including vesting schedules, voting rights restrictions, and resale mechanisms. Three teams have requested advance copies of the proposed rules. Also watch for Barkley's first full season under the structure—if he eclipses 1,400 rushing yards and the Eagles reach the NFC Championship, expect more agents to push for ownership components in 2025 negotiations.
The Eagles play the Commanders in Week 16. Barkley needs 187 yards over the final three games to reach 2,000 for the season, which would make him the ninth player in NFL history to hit that mark. His equity stake vests $240,000 per year, roughly the cost of a rookie minimum contract.