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INGLEWOOD, CA - SEPTEMBER 28: Indianapolis Colts quarterback Daniel Jones (17) throws a pass before the NFL game between the Indianapolis Colts and the Los Angeles Rams on September 28, 2025, at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
According to multiple league sources,Indianapolis Colts starting quarterback Daniel Jones, who was just re-signed on Wednesday afternoon to a 2-year, $88 million deal, which can be worth up to $100 million, has had some of his specific contract details emerge:
Colts QB Daniel Jones is signing a two-year, $88 million deal to stay in Indianapolis. Details on the agreement …
• His base pay is $50 million in 2026 ($12.2M more than the tag), with a chance to earn $6 million more in incentives.
• His base pay is $38 million in 2027…
— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) March 11, 2026
Daniel Jones' 2 year, $88M base value extension with the #Colts makes him the 16th highest average paid QB ($44M) in football.
It aligns with our model, which placed Jones on a $43.6M valuation this offseason.
— Spotrac (@spotrac) March 11, 2026
While it’s a short-term deal for the Colts, this looks like a big win for Jones and his camp, as with performance based incentives, he can earn up to the $50 million per year that his representation shockingly had reportedly requested from Indianapolis—meaning it pays to be an average to good NFL starting quarterback these days.
When comparing it to the 3-year, $100.5 million deal that Sam Darnold got last year, who had a better line entering free agency last year from the Minnesota Vikings (with 35 passing touchdowns to 12 interceptions during 17 starts in 2024, compared to Jones’ 19 passing touchdown to 8 interceptions in 14 starts during 2025), the Colts are seemingly paying Jones in 2 years, what he should’ve ideally made in 3 years.
For Jones, in addition to getting a high dollar amount, he secures a 2nd-year, if he can’t regain his prior Pro Bowl caliber form with Indianapolis in 2026, after presumably returning less than a full year from a season-ending torn Achilles suffered late in Week 14 of this past campaign.
For the Colts, while this is a major short-term commitment to Jones from a financial standpoint, it provides them an easy exit if Jones can’t return to form, becomes oft-injured, or proves he’s not the guy for the QB1 job anymore. After all, while Jones initial debut in Indianapolis was good, it only spanned roughly 14 starts and again, he’s coming off a significant Achilles injury.
The other positive news is that depending on tacked on void years,the Colts presumably saved some significant cap space by replacing what would’ve otherwise been Jones’ transition tag cap hit ($37.833M) for the 2026 season and agreeing to this new 2-year deal.
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