The edge defender market stood south of $35MM per year barely 13 months ago. It has now climbed to $50MM AAV. Will Anderson Jr. agreed to a monster Texans extension Friday, continuing this market’s rocket rise.
Houston and Anderson agreed to a three-year, $150MM extension that comes with $134MM guaranteed, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport reports. The contract includes a no-trade clause. This is a rarity among non-quarterbacks, but Anderson is now (by a notable margin) the highest-paid non-QB in NFL history.
[RELATED: Early Extensions For First-Rounders In Fifth-Year Option Era]
Anderson will receive $100MM fully guaranteed, Rapoport adds. This crucial number checks in third among defenders — behind Micah Parsons and T.J. Watt — but the guarantee vesting schedule will be important to learn here.
Parsons landed $120MM at signing, agreeing to a four-year extension. Parsons and Anderson each signed off on five-year terms (effectively), as one season remained on the ex-Cowboy’s rookie contract at the time of signing. The Texans exercised Anderson’s fifth-year option last week, locking him down through 2027. Although this extension provides the former No. 3 overall pick with a massive guarantee influx, the rookie deal running through 2027 will keep him under Texans control through 2030.
While Anderson has not achieved what Parsons, Watt or Myles Garrett have, he is just 24 and coming off a first-team All-Pro season. The Alabama alum tallied 12 sacks last season, teaming with Danielle Hunter to form a dominant edge-rushing duo. The Texans gave Hunter one-year bumps in each of the past two offseasons; the 31-year-old Anderson bookend is now signed through 2027 via the $40.1MM deal he inked last month. In terms of AAV, the Texans have the NFL’s highest- and fourth-highest-paid edge rushers.
Anderson, who registered 11 sacks in 2024, follows Derek Stingley Jr. in signing a three-year, market-shifting extension in his fourth NFL offseason. Houston gave its cornerback ace a three-year, $90MM extension. That moved the CB market by $5MM per year at the time and set the table for Sauce Gardner and Trent McDuffie‘s extensions. Anderson moved his market’s AAV bar by $3.5MM, with the Packers signing off on a record-setting Parsons agreement following an August 2025 trade.
We heard earlier this week Anderson was likely to set a price point at or above $50MM per year. The salary cap’s annual growth has changed players’ preferred term length, with three-year deals far more common now than they were even a few offseasons ago. The cap jumped from $279.2MM to $301.2MM this offseason. Anderson may well end up the top beneficiary from the latest climb, and it is certainly noteworthy to trace the EDGE market’s transformation over the past 13-plus months.
Nick Bosa‘s $34MM-per-year 49ers extension stood as the high-water mark here from September 2023 to March 2025. Before Bosa’s September 2023 agreement, no one had eclipsed Watt’s first Steelers payday ($28MM per year) for two full years.
Both Brian Burns and Josh Hines-Allen‘s 2024 deals did not come especially close to eclipsing Bosa’s pact, but the Raiders’ March 2025 Maxx Crosby extension (three years, $106.5MM) gave the position a new kingpin. The floodgates opened when the Browns changed Garrett’s trade aim with a four-year, $160MM payday days later. Hunter’s first Texans extension bridged the gap between Crosby and Garrett, and the Steelers gave Watt his second extension (three years, $123MM) last summer. After Parsons’ blockbuster extension delayed the Lions’ talks with Aidan Hutchinson, Detroit’s star pass rusher reached $45MM per year to sit second to Parsons in defender AAV when the dust settled. Hutchinson drops to third after this Anderson news.
While Aaron Donald once led the way among all defenders, a sizable gap has now emerged between edge rushers and interior defensive linemen. Not dissimilar to the gulf that has formed between wide receivers and tight ends, Anderson’s $50MM-per-year number is now nearly $19MM north of Chris Jones‘ DT-leading AAV ($31.75MM). The rest of the D-tackle market sits a whopping $24MM in AAV behind the new EDGE ceiling. It would stand to reason that market will receive an update, but after the two positional ceilings stood near one another entering the 2025 offseason — a year after Jones’ payday — it is striking to see how much more valuable teams have viewed top edge defenders in the months since.
After essentially conducting a pre-rebuild year in his first year on the job — a 2021 season that featured 17 Deshaun Watson healthy scratches amid the QB’s trade request and subsequent turmoil — Nick Caserio drafted Stingley and Jalen Pitre in 2022. The 2023 draft brought more foundational pieces, with the Texans taking C.J. Stroud at No. 2 overall and then trading up nine spots to nab Anderson at No. 3. Caserio sent the Cardinals the Texans’ own 2024 first-rounder — rather than the third first-rounder obtained from the Browns for Watson — to move up, and Houston’s 2023 success dropped that pick to No. 27. The Texans beating the Browns in the 2023 wild-card round made Cleveland’s pick higher than Arizona’s in 2024; though, Houston traded out of that first round (and last year’s first round).
The Texans have formed a menacing defense, and Anderson joins Stingley as the driving forces. Unsurprisingly, a rumor surfaced during the 2025 season the Texans were eyeing a 2026 payday for their emerging edge rusher. The sides entered talks late last month. Houston has now extended both its defensive anchors on three-year accords, giving both DeMeco Ryans cornerstones a chance to come back to the table before age 30.
It remains to be seen if the Texans will pay Stroud this offseason, but after an uneven two seasons following his Offensive Rookie of the Year campaign, it may behoove both parties to wait. As it stands, Stroud appears likelier to be extended in 2027. The team exercised its QB’s fifth-year option, however, providing a sizable guarantee ($25.9MM) for 2027. Anderson’s option came in at $21.51MM, but that is now moot thanks to this extension.
Like Jaxon Smith-Njigba in Seattle, Houston is taking care of key contract business involving a 2023 first-rounder rather than dragging the process out into a contract year. The Seahawks gave the reigning Offensive Player of the Year a receiver-record contract shortly after exercising his fifth-year option. Now, the Texans have followed suit and will build their defense around the Anderson and Stingley deals for the foreseeable future.

Yowza. That’s an awful lot of money to give a non-QB on a contract too short to really move money around for a team that doesn’t have huge amounts of cap space. In the other hand: Excellent player at a high value position who draws raves for his character, and the cap is going to skyrocket before this deal is over because of new broadcasting deals. Plus, unlike Parsons, this contract isn’t in conjunction with the cost of two first round picks. But whew, that’s a big three year deal, especially for a team that hasn’t paid its quarterback.
Like you said, the salary cap will go up. There’s still time to pay Stroud…or replace him.
If Stroud doesn’t have a top eight type quarterback year, I’d definitely bet on Houston not extending him. They have the fifth year option as a fallback, though, in case Stroud plays just okay or merely above average.
I think that the uncertainty surrounding him might play into the yearly structures-perhaps they’re planning on doing the guarantees early in order to not have to pay them as the same as the quarterback? Having a long term deal for Stroud or some quarterback in his place probably would make planning long term extensions for non-QBs easier, but Stroud’s regression makes that difficult to predict.
Dude is a beast..That’s a lot of bread for a non quarterback. They can do this with C.J still locked into a lower hit. He is their defensive leader so kudos to securing the bag Will!
Dumb
Fascinating insight. Why is it dumb?
Why does every comment have to be an analysis, complete with supporting stats, just to satisfy some hypothetical insight worthiness? I think it’s a dumb move. That’s my comment. You don’t like it, just move on. Replying to a one word comment also lacks insight and believing the comment section is where true insight comes from lacks awareness.
Bruh, I just wanted your opinion on why it was a dumb move to pay him that contract. I didn’t dislike it, but just saying “dumb” is an incomplete comment. Same as if I only commented with “awesome!” Why is it awesome? Just wanted you to expand on your thoughts. Thanks for doing that.
Dumb money for a guy that DOESNT PLAY 3 downs! He’s a pass rushing specialist! No reason he should be anywhere near Parsons and Watt money! But they don’t have a qb to spend it on too so 3 year dumb money makes sort of sense. In 3 years though the just priced themselves out of him on another contract!
I knew $50 million a year for an edge defender was coming but I figured it would be Parsons or a healthy Hutchinson.
Anderson is an absolute monster though. We’ll see if he keeps ascending to be on their level and justify this contract.
It’s a lot of money but it’s easily off set by Texans willingness to trade back and use extra 2nds and 3rds to supplement the roster
If you have a QB(Mahomes) dominate pass rusher (Jones) and solid core of guys around them who some you pay (Humphrey, Karlarfis, Smith) and some you don’t ( Watson Snead McDuffie) and utilize draft picks and udfa well along with cheap veterans looking to ring chase
You can compete for extended periods of times even after paying he premium core guys
Who is Mahomes in this scenario?
Mahomes himself?
I think it’s just an example, but I get it. Stroud hasn’t proven that, but the strategy described makes sense. Unfortunately for Houston, they don’t have a concrete answer at QB for the future at this current time.
Stroud is really going to need a big year this year, or the Texans will have to start looking for a replacement (even if that simply means real competition for the next season)Xmas. They might not replace Stroud so quickly, especially if he’s closer to average than he is to bad, but they’ll definitely stop planning on him being a lock for the future like they did after his rookie year.
Don’t where that “Xmas” part came from. This phone creates words sometimes for no reason.
Stupid number. They didnt have to climb that high. This is gonna be too much to ask a team to do going forward.
Three years, $150 million that comes with $134 million guaranteed to play football. I just can’t comprehend that amount of money. The idea of that that amount of money tells me the world is totally fricking warped. That’s a nice way if putting it.
It’s better than Roger Goodell making more than $60 million per year.
Yeh. It’s all wrapped up into a total package.
I kind of get where your sentiment is coming from, but come on man. These are entertainers. There are compensated by the amount of revenue they generate. If you had a job and you were bringing in hundreds of millions of dollars a year in revenue you would expect to get a cut of that. And that is not abnormal
Besides, it’s all fake money printed by a big machine that has nothing backing it but people’s belief in it.
The key words are entertainers and fake money. Your words. So in that case God Bless America
The only question I have is can he pitch? There’s another team in town that can use somebody who can throw pitches for strikes
Maybe, maybe not, but you’re probably not going to charge the mound.
The Texans are probably thinking that if this deal backfires they can always trade Anderson to Jimmy Haslam for a tidy profit.
He has been a building block for them. Cap increases each year and NFL money has a way of stretching and not being real. They will restructure next year, when no guarantees he will get a new one and push any voids down the road.
Crazzzzzzzzy
I know he’s elite but to think Clowney is a FA and at 33 he started 6 games last year (13 total) and had 8.5 sacks.
Not at all saying he’s better but value
Saquon is the highest paid RB at just over 20 mil and Trey McBride the highest paid TE at just under 20mil
You could have the any RB and TE in the league and still have room to sign Clowney instead to play DE.
Money isn’t real
Just like the birds…
The wealthiest bird is the one that’s a Robin 🙂