NHL salary cap rises to $104M


NHL salary cap rises to $104M

The National Hockey League’s (NHL) salary cap will reach a record high $104M per team starting from the 2026-27 season. This is an increase of $8.5 million (8.9%) from the previous season and may even increase to $113.5 million the following season.

The salary cap floor, which is the minimum total amount of money a professional sports team is required to spend on player salaries during a season, is $76.9M, making the minimum higher than what the ceiling was 8 years ago in 2018. The individual player maximum will therefore increase to $20.8M during the 2026-27 season.

Seven teams reportedly surpassed the cap during the 2025-26 season, and the Vegas Golden Knights spent the most at $107.49M. Teams are permitted to exceed the cap using the salaries of players who are out injured for a long period of time.

Deals with ESPN and TNT Sports will help see NHL surpass $7B in mixed currency this season. The league just had its most viewed first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. Commissioner of the NHL, Gary Bettman, voiced: “It's a really good time, and we don't even have the ​biggest markets (involved in the playoffs). “This is about how good the hockey ⁠is.”

Bettman also highlighted the spread of hockey internationally due to events such as the Olympics and even credited Heated Rivalry, a Canadian TV drama centring on romance between two rival professional ice hockey players, which is a global streaming hit. Even though Bettman cited the high-level competition being demonstrated currently as the leading factor driving growth, he also recognises that “it’s never one thing” which enables such development.

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