
Full details of Aaron Rodgers' contract with Steelers revealed — including performance inventives
The details have emerged about Aaron Rodgers' contract with the Steelers, including the milestones that the 41-year-old quarterback has to hit in order to reach his performance-based incentives.
Rodgers' contract is worth $13.65 million for the one year, with $10 million guaranteed, but his deal could reach as high as $19.5 million with the incentives.
According to Sports Illustrated's Albert Breer, Rodgers would have to play 70 percent of the Steelers' regular-season snaps in order to be eligible for any of his incentives.
Advertisement
Quarterback Aaron Rodgers of the Pittsburgh Steelers participates during mandatory minicamp at UPMC Rooney Sports Complex on June 10, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Getty Images
The future Hall of Famer would receive an extra $500,000 if the Steelers qualified for the postseason, Breer said.
A wild-card round victory in which he played 50 percent of the game or his team earned a first-round bye would mean a $600,000 bump for Rodgers.
Advertisement
If Rodgers leads the Steelers to a divisional round win and he is on the field for at least half the snaps, he would earn $750,000 more.
The incentives hit the millions when it comes to leading the Steelers to victory later in the playoffs, with a win in the AFC championship game in which he plays half percent of the game would trigger a $1 million contract incentive.
A Super Bowl win would trigger a $1.5 million incentive.
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) stretches during minicamp at their South Side facility.
Philip G. Pavely-Imagn Images
Advertisement
Rodgers would receive $1.5 million if he won the AP MVP award.
Tuesday marked Rodgers' first day on the field with the Steelers after he signed his new deal with the team over the weekend, ending a long offseason saga over where the QB would end up playing — if at all – in 2025.
Speaking with reporters after practice on Tuesday, he described the feeling as similar to 'the first day of school.'
Advertisement
'I don't know a lot of guys' names,' Rodgers told reporters. 'They don't have names on the back of their jerseys yet. They don't have names on the meeting rooms. I literally walk out of the locker room lost. I have to grab somebody and say, 'Hey, where am I going?'
'But I'll get the feel of it. I'm excited about making this home.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rodgers marks first day with Steelers by revealing secret wedding
Aaron Rodgers joined the Steelers for the start of their mandatory mini-camp on Tuesday [Reuters] New Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers has revealed he had a secret wedding earlier this year. The NFL's four-time Most Valuable Player spent months contemplating his future before deciding to sign a one-year deal with the Steelers. Advertisement Rodgers signed his contract on Saturday and in a picture posted by the team on social media, he had a black band on his wedding ring finger. The 41-year-old held a news conference on Tuesday after spending his first day training with the Steelers and one of the last questions was about the ring. "Yeah, it's a wedding ring," said Rodgers. Asked how long he's been married, he added: "It's been a couple of months." Rodgers was released after a disappointing second season with the New York Jets, becoming a free agent for the first time in his 20-year career. He had visited the Steelers and reportedly received an offer from the New York Giants, but in April, Rodgers said that he was "open to anything", including retirement. Advertisement The 2011 Super Bowl winner previously said that he delayed his decision because of personal reasons and, earlier in Tuesday's news conference, he said: "I was dealing with a lot of things in my personal life. "Some things improved a little bit, where I felt like I could fully be all in here with the guys. "I didn't want to short-change the guys and be signed but be elsewhere mentally or physically. Until I could be here and be all in, I needed to take care of my business." Who is Aaron Rodgers' wife? Rodgers, who spent the first 18 years of his career with the Green Bay Packers, has had a number of high-profile partners during his NFL career. Advertisement But he has not been married previously and did not share any further information about his wife on Tuesday. Speaking to The Pat McAfee Show in December, he said he had a girlfriend named Brittani while discussing Christmas shopping. When one of the co-hosts joked about whether it was singer Britney Spears, Rodgers replied: "Not Britney Spears, no. This is Brittani with an 'i'." Speaking to Pat McAfee again in April, Rodgers added that he is "in a serious relationship". "I have off-the-field stuff going on that requires my attention," he added. "I have personal commitments I made, not knowing what my future was going to look like after last year, that are important to me." Advertisement It now seems that one of those commitments was a wedding, perhaps even a honeymoon too. What else did Rodgers say on first day? After visiting the Steelers, Rodgers has said that he remained in regular contact with head coach Mike Tomlin before informing him of his decision. The 53-year-old is the NFL's longest-serving current head coach having been in charge at Pittsburgh since 2007. He led the franchise to a sixth Super Bowl win in 2009, before losing the big game to Rodgers' Packers in 2011, and the Steelers have not had a losing record in Tomlin's 18 seasons in charge. Asked why he chose Pittsburgh, Rodgers said: "It starts with Mike Tomlin. I've been a fan of his for a long time. Advertisement "The rapport that fell in between me and Mike made it to where, as I was going through my personal stuff, that there wasn't any other option for me. It was here or not play [retire]." Only Peyton Manning (five) has been named the NFL MVP more times than Rodgers, yet a second Super Bowl win has eluded him. Asked what a Super Bowl win with Pittsburgh would mean, Rodgers said: "It'd mean a seventh championship for the city. That'd be great. "I have a lot that motivates me, but this is about the love for the game - a game that has given me so much over the years - and making peace with a nice, long career."


USA Today
34 minutes ago
- USA Today
Colin Cowherd's T.J. Watt contract rant goes viral: 'He owns the Steelers'
Colin Cowherd's T.J. Watt contract rant goes viral: 'He owns the Steelers' Colin Cowherd — the Steelers' biggest critic — is back at it again. One of the biggest stories in Pittsburgh right now is T.J. Watt's absence from mandatory minicamp amid intense contractual negotiations with the Steelers — and Cowherd weighed in. On The Herd, the controversial sports personality kept it short, sweet, and bold with his prediction on Watt's holdout situation throughout mandatory minicamp: "[Watt's] not going to show up — and you know why? Because he knows he owns Mike Tomlin. He owns the Steelers. He's going to get whatever he wants. Everybody in Pittsburgh owns a T.J. Watt jersey — [the Steelers] don't want the backlash. The Rooneys — small town — they don't want the backlash, and he's going to get whatever he wants." Cowherd would continue to tear apart the Steelers for spending premium on defense, emphasizing that Super Bowl contenders are going offense first — before ultimately concluding that extending Watt would do nothing for playoff success. For up-to-date Steelers coverage, follow us on X @TheSteelersWire and give our Facebook page a like.


Fast Company
36 minutes ago
- Fast Company
Since when were NFL rookies so good at painting?
Say what you will about our workforce's newest employees, but for the NFL's incoming class of 2025, rookies today are arriving to the league with a strong recall of the intricacies of their team logos and are surprisingly adept at painting. The NFL released the latest edition of 'Rookies Paint,' the league's annual video showing rookies painting team logos from memory. Most of the attempts over the years are painfully and humorously amateurish, and the funny tradition has evolved into merch. This year, though, a number of rookies showed remarkable skill under pressure. Given the short five-minute time frame they have to complete it, it's impressive how many managed to get close to their new team's logo. Los Angeles Rams tight end Terrance Ferguson nailed his team's logo. Indianapolis Colts tight end Tyler Warren and New York Giants running back Cam Skattlebo were on the right track. Kaleb Johnson, a Pittsburgh Steelers running back, got the gist of his team's Steelmark, despite an issue with sizing and placing the right colors in the wrong order of the three hypocycloids, the red, yellow, and blue shapes that represent the elements that make steel. 'I see it every year and I'm always like, 'oh, I would nail that,' and now that I'm here I can already tell not not nailing it,' said Issac Teslaa, a Detroit Lions wide receiver who actually did a decent job with the basics of his team's lion mark. 'I think I did better than I was expecting to do,' he said at the end. Since the series has run for multiple years, today's rookies might come to the task better prepared, but that still doesn't mean everyone nailed it. Even though he was wearing pants with the Jacksonville Jaguars logo stamped on them, rookie Travis Hunter could not recreate the logo himself. Others were challenged with translating the picture in their head onto the paper in one quick attempt. Two Cleveland Browns rookies took different perspectives for their team's logos, with running back Quinshon Judkins painting a front-facing view while quarterback Dillion Gabriel did a side profile that captured the real logo's perspective, if not the exact right tilt.