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Seahawks GM: Washington’s new millionaire’s tax will ‘sting’ in recruitment

By Thomson Reuters Mar 13, 2026 | 8:43 PM

The Seattle Seahawks were admired by many for their team building through the draft and free agency, which helped them win Super Bowl LX ​in February. However, Washington state’s new “millionaire’s tax” could ‌hinder their roster development and player recruitment in the future.

On Wednesday, the Washington state Senate approved a new measure that will impose a 9.9% tax on earnings exceeding $1 million annually. The measure ‌was ​passed with a 27-21 vote and ⁠is likely to be ⁠signed into law by Gov. Bob Ferguson, who has already expressed his support for the bill. Payments will first be due in 2029.

It is expected that the ​bill will affect just 0.5% of Washington’s residents, disproportionately affecting athletes in the state, who make up a ⁠large portion of that.

“It’s gonna ⁠sting. There’s no question about it,” Seahawks ​general manager John Schneider said in an interview with KIRO-AM. “All ​the pro teams here in town, (not having a state ‌income tax has) always been a huge attraction, especially competing with the California teams. It’s been a big deal for us. So, yeah, it’s going to sting from ⁠a recruiting standpoint.”

The NFL minimum salary in 2026 for any player with at least one season is set at $1.005 million, so ⁠this will ‌apply to any new player the Seahawks ⁠are looking to recruit. So far this ​offseason, the ‌Seahawks have signed three external free ​agents, all ⁠to one-year deals, and have lost key players like Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III.

Washington will join California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, and New York — as well as the District of Columbia — in adopting some version of the millionaire’s ​tax.

–Field Level Media