Who are the highest paid players for the 2023 MLB season? List of salaries by position
For all the talk about baseball dying, the money involved in the game is bigger than ever. We look at the pockets where most of it ends up.
Baseball is awash with money. Never has that been more true than right now. And despite all of the talk from certain quarters about how baseball is dying, the accounts would seem to belie that concept.
While NFL and NBA players might get more annual pay than MLB players, the length of the career in those sports is markedly shorter than a career in baseball. However, it must be remembered that the big money is reserved for only the top one percent of players, as in life.
What is the average MLB salary?
While the majority of professional baseball players in this country ply their trade in minor and independent leagues, once you make it to the Show, there is a significant pay bump.
And even while the bulk of those players are on league minimum contracts, or something very close to it, there is enough cash at the top end to sway the MLB average salary ever upward.
While the league minimum is $700k, representing a nearly 20% increase on the old minimum, the MLB average is the highest that it has ever been, at $4.41 million for 2023.
Who is the highest paid MLB player?
Not that long ago, jaws dropped at Mike Trout’s 12-year, $426.5 million contract, equating to just over $37 million a year. No longer.
While Trout’s may still have a higher long-term value than others, the yearly payroll numbers of several players have pushed him into fifth place.
For the 2023 season, the highest-paid player on any team is a two-way tie between Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander. The New York Mets will fork out $43.3 million each for their services, a total of $86.6 million to have two hall-of-fame shoe-ins on the mound.
The nearest player to that is across town in the Bronx, where the Yankees will hand Aaron Judge $40 million this season.
The Angels, for all of their post-season woes, and their inability to cobble together a winning team, will stick their hands deep into their pockets as well, with Anthony Rendon hauling in $38.5 million this season. And this on top of the $37 million that they will owe Mike Trout in salary for 2023.
It remains to be seen if the Angels can hold onto Shohei Ohtani after this season or not, but if they do, their payroll could skyrocket, with his salary expected to fly from the current number fifteen up into the top two or three in MLB.