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What the transfer portal costs now: Position-by-position price ranges amid a market surge
Posted on 12/31/25 at 1:26 pm
Posted on 12/31/25 at 1:26 pm
To give an idea what it will cost to fill out the roster next year
LINK
quote:
What does that look like for the entire market? CBS Sports talked to dozens of sources from agents to general managers to collective leaders to put together value ranges for each position ahead of this window's official opening.
quote:quote:
Quarterback
High End: > $3.5 million
Average: $1.5 million to $2.5 million
Low End: $750,000 to $1 million
Just like in the NFL where the top quarterbacks account for around 20% of a team's cap, the best portal quarterbacks this cycle are expected to command a hefty chunk of the pie.
Top-ranked arms like Brendan Sorsby (from Cincinnati), Josh Hoover (from TCU) and Sam Leavitt (from Arizona State) are expected to reach -- and possibly pass -- the $3.5 million mark.
It's well-documented last cycle's double dip (teams spending freely before rev-share caps were put into place over the summer) allowed teams to go gangbusters in transfer portal spending, including at QB where Duke made the little-known Darian Mensah famous for a $4 million annual salary. General managers thought there would be a downturn in spending at the position this cycle because of rev-share caps, but that sentiment has changed in recent weeks.
quote:
What 20% of a team's cap looks like depends on the school. Some Power Four programs will only be at the full revenue sharing max, around $14-18 million for each Power Four football programs. Other big spenders will be at $25 million-plus due to the outside name, image and likeness deals the program manages to generate.
As for whether it makes sense to pay a quarterback that much, it's a matter of debate for the general managers we spoke with.
"Even if you're at $25 million, are you really going to put 20 percent of your resources into one player?" a Big Ten GM said. "You better hope he's good. You better hope he's Fernando Mendoza or Diego Pavia – he has to be or that's a bad investment."
quote:
Even high-upside backups who haven't started are making that sort of ask.
"I don't know in the portal if you're going to get a guy experienced and proven (for) less than $2 million," a SEC GM said.
quote:
Running back
High End: > $1 million
Average: $400,000 to $700,000
Low End: $250,000
quote:
Wide receiver
High End: $1 million to $2 million
Average: $500,000 to $800,000
Low End: $300,000 to $500,000
quote:
Tight end
High End: $600,000 to $800,000
Average: $300,000 to $500,000
Low End: $200,000 to $300,000
quote:
Offensive Tackle
High End: > $1 million
Average: $500,000 to $1 million
Low End: $300,000 to $500,000
Outside of quarterbacks, offensive tackle is the position that traditionally commanded the highest average premium. Even some non-proven tackles last cycle -- think 300 or fewer snaps coming from a high-end Power Four program -- commanded well into the seven-figure range last year.
That seems to have shifted, or at least plateaued, this cycle.
"That's the one position that oddly feels like it's the same market as last year," the SEC GM said
quote:
Interior Offensive Line
High End: $600,000 to $800,000
Average: $300,000 to $500,000
Low End: $200,000 to $300,000
quote:
EDGE
High End: $1 million to $1.7 million
Average: $600,000 to $1 million
Low End: $300,000 to $500,000
After quarterback and offensive tackle, edge-rusher is the premium position where you'll see considerable resources dedicated for many programs. If you have a game-wrecker at this position, it can open so much for you defensively and it's why so many programs want a great one.
With high demand comes hefty prices. If a player like South Carolina's Dylan Stewart, who recently re-upped with the Gamecocks, had instead hit the portal, he would have garnered in the $2 million range, according to a Big Ten personnel executive. If you want anyone even in the neighborhood of Stewart's caliber, you'll be spending seven figures this cycle. One general manager known for shopping in the expensive portal aisles said "the really good ones are between $1-$1.5 million."
quote:
Defensive tackle
High End: $800,000 to > $1.5 million
Average: $500,000 to $700,000
Low End: $250,000 to $500,000
The scarcity of talented defensive tackles has made this a position of high value if you're going shopping out of the transfer portal. The gem of this year's class is Wake Forest's Mateen Igirogba (No. 5 in 247Sports' rankings) who could command in that range of $1.5 million or a little more. USC transfer Devin Thompkins, No. 11 in the rankings, is another expected to be in the seven-figure range.
quote:
Linebacker
High end: > $700,000
Average: $250,000 to $500,000
Low end: $150,000 to $250,000
The general consensus is this is the cheapest starting position outside of the specialists. Multiple people we talked to believed you could get a good starter around $300,000. If you wanted an all-conference type, it'd be in the $600,000 range.
quote:
Cornerback
High end: $800,000 to > $1 million
Average: $400,000 to $700,000
Low end: $150,000 to $350,000
quote:
Safety
High end: $700,000 to $1 million
Average: $350,000 to $500,000
Low end: $200,000 to $350,000
quote:
Specialists
General range: $50,000 to $200,000
Specialists make money, too! It's not often discussed in portal season, but there's a healthy market for specialists, especially the really good ones. Solid starters will be in the $50,000 to $100,000 range. But the best kickers and punters, especially in the Big Ten and SEC, can push between $100,000 and $200,000.
LINK
Posted on 12/31/25 at 1:37 pm to The Pirate King
quote:
Will be really interesting seeing how much TreyDez gets. I think he'll be at least $1 mill.
I think he's going to want high-end WR money like Jimmy Graham with the saints back when they put the franchise tag on him years ago. Is he worth high-end WR money? Graham was, IMO
Posted on 12/31/25 at 1:43 pm to SPEEDY
So your run-of-the-mill average QB in CFB is warranting a 2 million dollar price tag.
Truly crazy to think about.
Truly crazy to think about.
Posted on 12/31/25 at 2:07 pm to SPEEDY
Someone is going to pay Cam Coleman over $2M, I just hope it's not us.
Posted on 12/31/25 at 2:15 pm to benoit_BayouBengals
quote:
Someone is going to pay Cam Coleman over $2M, I just hope it's not us.
Yeah, give me two $1 million receivers over paying him that
Posted on 12/31/25 at 2:45 pm to SPEEDY
I have a family member who is a starting guard at a lower end p4 school. Next year he is getting 200k plus 10k per month in NIL. He has to do stuff for the NIL money.
Based on what his dad told me about other guys on his team, those numbers look correct.
Based on what his dad told me about other guys on his team, those numbers look correct.
This post was edited on 12/31/25 at 2:50 pm
Posted on 12/31/25 at 4:32 pm to SPEEDY
Put me down for a running back and an offensive lineman

Posted on 12/31/25 at 4:36 pm to SPEEDY
quote:
Yeah, give me two $1 million receivers over paying him that
He’d be a first round pick if he was eligible next year , I’d take him . Maybe not being a Lacy over from Ole Miss and stick with Berry and Durham as your top two backs .
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