NHL Salary Cap By Team

Why can a team be over the cap?
Team Proj
Cap Hit
Proj
Space
Current
Space
Dead
Space
Active
Roster
Retained
Left
Contracts Forwards Defense Goalies
$97,649,404$97.65M
$-14,149,404$-14.15M
$547,499$547K
- 26/23
49/50
72%
36%
12%
$93,769,295$93.77M
$-10,269,295$-10.27M
$32,082$32K
$1,906,250$1.91M 24/23
47/50
61%
44%
12%
$92,210,861$92.21M
$-8,710,861$-8.71M
$1,689,183$1.69M
- 23/23
53/50
69%
35%
13%
$90,952,605$90.95M
$-7,499,272$-7.50M
$2,857,590$2.86M
$637,500$638K 22/23
47/50
67%
32%
7%
$88,861,813$88.86M
$-5,361,813$-5.36M
$5,704,167$5.70M
$8,022,083$8.02M 26/23
46/50
62%
19%
15%
$86,582,298$86.58M
$-3,166,881$-3.17M
$4,295,556$4.30M
$996,667$997K 24/23
51/50
55%
39%
9%
$85,945,386$85.95M
$-2,445,386$-2.45M
$330,855$331K
$2,725,000$2.73M 22/23
46/50
65%
32%
4%
$85,791,687$85.79M
$-2,682,521$-2.68M
$7,891,664$7.89M
$7,645,000$7.65M 24/23
45/50
55%
29%
8%
$85,646,542$85.65M
$-2,497,375$-2.50M
$3,215,000$3.22M
$14,743,590$14.74M 26/23
50/50
50%
27%
10%
$85,422,724$85.42M
$-1,922,724$-1.92M
$282,500$283K
$4,833,333$4.83M 23/23
49/50
52%
38%
10%
$85,264,451$85.26M
$-1,764,451$-1.76M
$4,167,500$4.17M
$3,979,167$3.98M 23/23
48/50
57%
33%
8%
$85,182,407$85.18M
$-1,890,740$-1.89M
$5,400,001$5.40M
$7,520,833$7.52M 25/23
49/50
59%
26%
8%
$84,680,763$84.68M
$-1,180,763$-1.18M
$955,000$955K
$610,891$611K 23/23
48/50
64%
33%
8%
$84,536,338$84.54M
$-1,036,338$-1.04M
$1,836,571$1.84M
- 24/23
45/50
63%
31%
8%
$83,750,632$83.75M
$-466,882$-467K
$4,212,500$4.21M
$8,200,763$8.20M 27/23
49/50
55%
35%
7%
$83,567,763$83.57M
$39,566$40K
$2,532,232$2.53M
$4,804,167$4.80M 26/23
50/50
60%
26%
13%
$83,523,490$83.52M
$178,429$178K
$11,419,485$11.42M
$6,616,667$6.62M 23/23
49/50
57%
32%
4%
$83,447,619$83.45M
$-13,452$-13K
$1,957,500$1.96M
$372,829$373K 22/23
44/50
68%
27%
6%
$83,380,203$83.38M
$132,144$132K
$8,457,221$8.46M
$1,495,000$1.50M 25/23
48/50
56%
35%
8%
$83,297,487$83.30M
$534,515$535K
$34,208,962$34.21M
$4,164,167$4.16M 24/23
47/50
62%
27%
6%
$83,091,197$83.09M
$408,802$409K
$26,163,342$26.16M
$2,750,000$2.75M 25/23
50/50
55%
35%
9%
$82,984,485$82.98M
$515,514$516K
$32,992,910$32.99M
$1,487,500$1.49M 27/23
44/50
60%
37%
7%
$82,735,767$82.74M
$1,498,235$1.50M
$95,887,096$95.89M
$2,425,000$2.43M 27/23
47/50
62%
22%
11%
$82,371,848$82.37M
$1,319,059$1.32M
$84,419,823$84.42M
$4,729,910$4.73M 23/23
51/50
51%
32%
9%
$80,681,405$80.68M
$2,818,594$2.82M
$180,390,023$180.39M
$5,213,889$5.21M 25/23
46/50
56%
27%
9%
$79,877,871$79.88M
$3,622,128$3.62M
$231,816,230$231.82M
$10,307,500$10.31M 28/23
53/50
49%
23%
9%
$79,390,593$79.39M
$4,109,406$4.11M
$263,002,038$263.00M
$2,891,667$2.89M 27/23
48/50
45%
37%
9%
$78,092,058$78.09M
$5,407,941$5.41M
$346,108,231$346.11M
$1,853,334$1.85M 22/23
46/50
59%
18%
6%
$77,295,350$77.30M
$6,204,649$6.20M
$397,097,569$397.10M
$8,805,556$8.81M 24/23
50/50
44%
37%
8%
$75,031,239$75.03M
$8,468,760$8.47M
$542,000,678$542.00M
$200,000$200K 23/23
43/50
55%
28%
3%
$74,998,336$75.00M
$8,501,663$8.50M
$544,106,468$544.11M
$9,944,707$9.94M 24/23
48/50
41%
27%
6%
$74,674,602$74.67M
$8,825,397$8.83M
$564,825,456$564.83M
$4,712,500$4.71M 26/23
50/50
55%
19%
9%
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NHL News

Signings

Apr 15 2024 | Philadelphia Flyers
Entry Level | 2 yrs
$1,900,000
Cap Hit
$950,000
Apr 15 2024 | Columbus Blue Jackets
Entry Level | 3 yrs
$2,850,000
Cap Hit
$950,000

Pat Brisson | CAA Sports LLC

Apr 15 2024 | Philadelphia Flyers
Entry Level | 2 yrs
$1,850,000
Cap Hit
$925,000

Pat Brisson | CAA Sports LLC

Apr 15 2024 | Calgary Flames
Apr 15 2024 | Dallas Stars
Entry Level | 2 yrs
$1,740,000
Cap Hit
$870,000
Apr 15 2024 | Tampa Bay Lightning
Entry Level | 3 yrs
$2,602,500
Cap Hit
$867,500

Pat Brisson | CAA Sports LLC

Apr 14 2024 | Anaheim Ducks
Entry Level | 3 yrs
$2,850,000
Cap Hit
$950,000

Kurt Overhardt | KO Sports, Inc.

All Signings

Trades

Mar 15 2024

The Ottawa Senators acquired Jamieson Rees from the Carolina Hurricanes for 2024 6th round pick

Mar 15 2024

The Ottawa Senators acquired Wyatt Bongiovanni from the Winnipeg Jets for future considerations

Mar 8 2024

The Vegas Golden Knights acquired Tomas Hertl, a 2025 3rd round pick, and 2027 3rd round pick from the San Jose Sharks for David Edstrom and 2025 1st round pick

All Trades

Transactions

Apr 15 2024 | Montreal Canadiens

Mailloux was promoted from AHL Laval on Monday.

Apr 15 2024 | Arizona Coyotes

Jenik was assigned to AHL Tucson on Monday.

Apr 15 2024 | Pittsburgh Penguins

Harkins (hand) has been taken off injured reserve ahead of Monday's game versus Nashville, per the NHL media site.

Apr 15 2024 | Vancouver Canucks

Demko (knee) will be activated from long-term injured reserve ahead of his home start against the Calgary Flames on Tuesday, Brendan Batchelor of Sportsnet 650 reports.

Apr 15 2024 | Anaheim Ducks

Silfverberg will sign a contract with Brynas IF of Sweden's HockeyAllsvenskan league for the 2024-25 season.

Apr 15 2024 | Dallas Stars

Hyry signed a two-year, entry-level contract with Dallas on Monday.

Apr 15 2024 | Columbus Blue Jackets

Subban was demoted to AHL Cleveland on Monday.

All Transactions

Injuries

DAY-TO-DAY | Upper Body |
Expected Return
Apr 16, 2024

Bokondji Imama | Imama (upper body) will not return to Monday's game against the New York Rangers.

DAY-TO-DAY | Upper Body |
Expected Return
Apr 16, 2024

Beck Malenstyn | Malenstyn (upper body) will not return to Monday's game against the Boston Bruins.

DAY-TO-DAY | Lower Body |
Expected Return
Sep 15, 2024

Tage Thompson | Thompson (lower body) will not return to Monday's game against the Tampa Bay Lightning.

OUT | Undisclosed |
Expected Return
Sep 15, 2024

Jacob MacDonald | MacDonald (undisclosed) will miss the final two games of the 2023-24 season, according to Max Miller of The Hockey News.

OUT | Undisclosed |
Expected Return
Sep 16, 2024

Mike Hoffman | Hoffman will miss the final two games of the season due to an undisclosed injury, Max Miller of The Hockey News reports.

OUT | Undisclosed |
Expected Return
Sep 16, 2024

Kevin Labanc | Labanc didn't travel with the team for its two-game road trip due to an undisclosed injury, ending his 2023-24 campaign, Max Miller of The Hockey News reports Monday.

OUT | Undisclosed |
Expected Return
Sep 15, 2024

Jan Rutta | Rutta (undisclosed) will miss the final two games of the regular season, Max Miller of The Hockey News reports.

All Injuries

Insights and Insiders

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What Is the NHL Salary Cap?

The NHL salary cap is the total amount that NHL teams may pay for players. The amount set as the salary cap each year depends on the league’s revenue for the previous season. As it is a 'hard cap,' there are no exemptions. However, if a player is injured and it's thought that they will miss at least 10 NHL games and 24 days in the season, their team can put them on long-term injured reserve (LTIR). By doing so, they can surpass the salary cap.

The salary cap was introduced to prevent teams with the most revenue signing all the top players, which was becoming a problem in the '90s and early 2000s. For instance, by signing a number of top-performing players and significantly spending more than the majority of other teams, the Detroit Red Wings were able to win three Stanley Cups in that time.

This led to the 2004-05 CBA negotiations, during which the entire season was cancelled — the first time a labor dispute has ever caused a cancellation in a major sports league in North America. At the time of the negotiations, teams were spending around 75 percent of their revenues on salaries — much higher than any other North American sports league. Eventually, they agreed to the general structure that remain today, including the mandatory payment to players in US dollars.

The concept of a salary cap is not new to the NHL. One was first introduced during the Great Depression, at which time the salary cap per team was $62,500 and $7,000 per player.

Salary Cap History

Since its reintroduction in the 2005-06 season, the NHL salary cap had risen every year until the pandemic shortened 2020-2021 season:

2005-2006$39.0 million
2006-2007$44.0 million
2007-2008$50.3 million
2008-2009$56.7 million
2009-2010$56.8 million
2010-2011$59.4 million
2011-2012$64.3 million
2012-2013$60.0 million *
2013-2014$64.3 million
2014-2015$69.0 million
2015-2016$71.4 million
2016-2017$73.0 million
2017-2018$75.0 million
2018-2019$79.5 million
2019-2020$81.5 million
2020-2021$81.5 million
2021-2022$81.5 million
2022-2023$82.5 million

* During the 2012-13 season, there was a lockout. The salary cap was set to $60 million, but NHL hockey teams were allowed to spend a pro-rated $70.2 million for the shortened season.

The salary floor (the minimum that a team must spend as a whole) is 85 percent of the salary midpoint. For the 2021-22 season, the cap floor is $60.2 million.

History of the Teams

Originally, there were just six NHL teams, called the Original Six. In the 1967-68 season, six new teams were added. The Original Six formed the East Division and the new six formed the West Division.

In 1974, six more NHL hockey teams joined the league, creating 18 in total. The league then took four teams from the World Hockey Association when it ceased to exist in 1979. With the Cleveland Barons gone in 1978, this brought the total to 21 teams.

There was no further expansion to the league until the '90s. The next new NHL team was the San Jose Sharks in 1991. Another eight were added in the subsequent decade to reach 30 teams by 2000. Finally, in 2016, Gary Bettman, the NHL commissioner, announced that another new NHL team — the Vegas Golden Knights — would join the List of NHL Teams, making 31 teams for the 2017-18 season.

Tune in to learn about developments in the league, your favorite NHL teams and players. PuckPedia brings you up to speed on the latest news and other exciting developments in the world of NHL hockey. Bookmark PuckPedia now!

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