July 7, 2024

The day before the draft, the Detroit Lions announced that Amon-Ra St. Brown had signed a contract that would make him the highest-paid wide receiver in the NFL by yearly average. The actual numbers are slightly different from the surface $30 million per year, and St. Brown’s standing as the highest-paid receiver lasted only a day when the Eagles increased A.J. Brown’s annual salary.

What is absolute is St. Brown will enter a new tax bracket with his greatly increased income. Most fans are aware of what’s called the “jock tax”. Players get taxed according to what state they play games in, which stands to have more impact on NFL players because they play fewer games. It’s also safe to say teams in states that have no state income tax (Texas, Florida) have some advantage in signing free agents.

This is a computation based on the surface details of St. Brown’s contract extension, which we know isn’t what he’ll be paid over the length of the agreement. He will not exceed $30 million in cash compensation until 2028, the final year of the deal. Still, the tax numbers are startling.
Clearly, no one is crying for St. Brown. He’s not going to struggle to make ends meet, and he certainly wasn’t struggling even when he was on his rookie contract and lost a significant amount of money due to a huge fine last season.

Alex Anzalone responds to post about tax implications for Amon-Ra St. Brown

A sports writer making whatever. A professional athlete making millions. A fireman, a doctor, an electrician, etc. We all complain about taxes. But it’s one of the core, unavoidable realities of life.

Alex Anzalone got a nice multi-year deal from the Lions last offseason, which landed him in a different tax bracket than he had been in.

An aggregator shared the details of the previous post about St. Brown’s new tax implications. Anzalone response was candid and spot-on.

Anzalone was not asking for sympathy about the taxes he and pro athletes pay based on their high incomes, he just pointed out the reality. Athletes can’t avoid said obligations with expenses, reported losses, etc., like other W2 employees, freelancers who get 1099s, etc. It’s just bigger numbers when you’re dealing with bigger money.

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