
Seattle Seahawks general manager John Schneider is going to be busy over the next few months. After he hires the team’s new head coach Schneider will have to do some roster trimming – because the Seahawks are currently projected to be several million dollars over the cap ceiling, which has been set at $242 million this year.
Based on their cap hits, there are several potential veterans who could become casualties this year. That includes Jamal Adams, Quandre Diggs and potentially even Tyler Lockett. While that might sound too harsh, the numbers speak for themselves. Here’s how all 32 NFL teams stack up in effective cap space going into 2024, according to Over the Cap.
1
Washington Commanders: $62,595,334

2
Tennessee Titans: $62,006,385

3
New England Patriots: $57,325,547

4
Indianapolis Colts: $54,701,486

5
Houston Texans: $54,329,127

6
Cincinnati Bengals: $53,189,822

7
Detroit Lions: $45,229,783

8
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: $35,283,295

9
Chicago Bears: $34,741,422

10
Las Vegas Raiders: $31,436,378

11
Arizona Cardinals: $30,989,080

12
Carolina Panthers: $26,540,410

13
Los Angeles Rams: $23,799,014

14
Atlanta Falcons: $20,051,337

15
Minnesota Vikings: $19,771,221

16
Kansas City Chiefs: $19,290,236

17
Philadelphia Eagles: $16,158,450

18
New York Giants: $14,204,144

19
Jacksonville Jaguars: $7,395,160

20
Baltimore Ravens: $5,117,202

21
New York Jets: $366,852

22
Green Bay Packers: -$7,396,019

23
Seattle Seahawks: -$9,508,500

24
San Francisco 49ers: -$11,731,132

25
Pittsburgh Steelers: -$19,377,318

26
Cleveland Browns: -$20,682,777

27
Dallas Cowboys: -$22,805,299

28
Denver Broncos: -$27,446,535

29
Buffalo Bills: -$53,865,053

30
Los Angeles Chargers: -$55,391,443

31
Miami Dolphins: -$58,869,079

32
New Orleans Saints: -$87,759,582
