NFL Playoff Payouts: How Players Cash In With Post-Season Earnings
January 16, 2026
Eligibility is determined by roster status at game time, involving 53-man rosters, injured reserve, and practice squad rules, with special considerations for conference championships and the Super Bowl.
The NFL’s playoff pay pool funds post-season earnings, with players’ base regular-season salaries separate from playoff compensation drawn from a league-wide pool rather than a single team.
Playoff pay is distributed in fixed amounts by round and depends on eligibility, with examples illustrating how regular-season earnings compare to playoff payouts for players who have moved between teams or held different roster statuses.
Playoff earnings are issued within roughly two weeks after each game, ensuring timely compensation.
Some players may receive multiple payments or “double-dip” when their postseason service includes time with different teams or elevated statuses, subject to eligibility rules.
The ceiling for a single-season playoff payout on a current team can reach about $376,000, with several teams and scenarios able to achieve higher totals; teams mentioned for context include the Bears, Patriots, Bills, Broncos, Texans, Rams, 49ers, and Seahawks.
Each illustrative case shows how halves or quarters of payout may apply to players based on roster status and service time within the postseason.
Payouts can be split into halves or quarters depending on roster status and service time, as seen in examples like Chauncey Gardner-Johnson and Keion White.
Round-by-round payout amounts vary: wild card and byes $53,500; division winners $58,500; divisional round $58,500; conference championship $81,000; Super Bowl loser $103,000; Super Bowl winner $178,000.
Summary based on 1 source
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CBS Sports • Jan 16, 2026
Agent's Take: How NFL playoff pay really works, from wild card games through the Super Bowl