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New Analyses Detail Ohtani’s Deferred $700 Million Dodgers Deal and Potential $90 Million Tax Edge

A back-loaded schedule defers $680 million to 2034–2043, creating a potential California tax advantage tied to future residency.

Overview

  • Ohtani’s agreement pays $2 million per year during the first 10 seasons, with the remaining $680 million deferred beyond the playing term.
  • Sportico reporting cited by Heavy says the deferred money is due in $68 million, no‑interest installments from 2034 through 2043.
  • Forbes calculates that establishing residence in a no‑income‑tax state before collecting the deferred income could avoid roughly $90 million in California taxes.
  • California Sen. Josh Becker introduced SJR 14 to limit state tax benefits from long deferrals, but reporting says no legislative progress has been made.
  • Sportico estimates Ohtani earned about $102 million off the field in 2025, supporting a 97% deferral that gives the Dodgers payroll flexibility and shifts obligations into the next decade.