Joel Bitonio’s $23.5M Browns retirement decision just changed: New deadline revealed originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
The clock was supposed to run out on February 16, but the Cleveland Browns aren’t ready to say goodbye to a legend just yet.
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According to The Athletic’s Jason Lloyd, the Browns and Joel Bitonio have officially agreed to push back the void date on his contract until the end of the league year in March. This move gives the veteran guard a few extra weeks to weigh his future, effectively moving the goalposts on a financial choice that will shape the team’s entire offseason.
As GM Andrew Berry navigates a massive roster crossroads, keeping Bitonio would be a huge help. With the potential to replace four out of five starting offensive linemen this winter, the O-line leader is the primary force standing between some much-needed stability and a total rebuild.
According to cap experts at 247Sports, Cleveland now has more breathing room to execute one of three distinct paths:
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1. The Extension: Slicing the Cap Hit
If Bitonio decides he still has the fire to play in 2026, a one-year, $12-to-15-million extension could work wonders. By utilizing a league-minimum salary and a signing bonus spread over void years, Cleveland could slash his cap hit from $23.5-million down to a more affordable $12.6-million. It’s a big win for the front office, keeping a Pro Bowler on the roster while gaining significant spending money.
2. The “Post-June 1” Retirement
If Bitonio hangs it up, the Browns have a creative fallback. By signing him to a minimum-cost deal now and waiting until June 2 to officially process the retirement, they can split that $23.5 million dead cap hit over two seasons ($8.5M in 2026; $14.9M in 2027). This prevents a single year from being swallowed by dead money.
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3. The Extra Breathing Room (Already In Motion)
By amending the contract to move the deadline, Berry has successfully avoided an immediate “cap acceleration.” Instead of being forced into a corner on February 16, the Browns now have until the start of the new league year in March to finalize a plan that protects their 2026 books.
Whether he returns for one last run or rides off into the sunset, Bitonio’s decision remains the biggest domino to fall for the Cleveland Browns.
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