Close Menu
vermontsportsnews.com
  • Home
  • Vermont College News
  • Vermont High School Sports
  • Vermont Charity Games
  • All Vermont Sports News
  • New England Sports News
  • US Sports News
  • World Sports News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Trump is gearing up to fix the ‘name, image and likeness’ mess that’s dogging college sports: sources
  • Familiar issues catch up to Vermont in Women's NCAA Tournament loss
  • High hopes for Vermont Lions Cup squad | Local
  • Where to watch World Athletics Indoor Championships: Schedule, times, TV channel, live stream for 2026 track and field event
  • See schedules, scores for Feb. 6-7 UVM basketball, hockey, lacrosse games
  • Celebrities play flag football for charity before Super Bowl in Santa Clara
  • Take a look: RI wrestlers compete at the New England championships
  • Winter Olympics: Team USA gets gold in figure skating team event
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
vermontsportsnews.com
Subscribe
Sunday, March 22
  • Home
  • Vermont College News
  • Vermont High School Sports
  • Vermont Charity Games
  • All Vermont Sports News
  • New England Sports News
  • US Sports News
  • World Sports News
vermontsportsnews.com
Home»World Sports News»Dodgers paying record $169M CBT tax after winning second straight World Series
World Sports News

Dodgers paying record $169M CBT tax after winning second straight World Series

VermontSportsNewsBy VermontSportsNewsDecember 22, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Dodgers paying record 9M CBT tax after winning second straight World Series
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Championship gold isn’t cheap. 

Fresh off taking down the Toronto Blue Jays in the World Series, the back-to-back defending champs are set to cough up a record $169.4 million in competitive balance tax (CBT) for the 2025 season, the Associated Press reported Friday.

The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 7 of the 2025 World Series. AP

The stunning cost stems from LA’s whopping $417.3 million CBT payroll, which is calculated based on the average annual value of player contracts rather than year-to-year salary. 

According to Cot’s Baseball Contracts, the Dodgers’ actual cash payroll for 2025 sat around $347 million.

Factoring in the CBT bill, the Dodgers will pay roughly $516.4 million for their championship-winning roster — easily the most expensive team in baseball history.

The Dodgers shattered their own CBT record from just one year prior — paying $103 million in CBT en route to a Fall Classic triumph over the Yankees.

Stunningly, LA’s tax bill is more expensive than the CBT payrolls of 12 major league clubs, including the Milwaukee Brewers, whom the Dodgers dispatched in the National League Championship Series.

Outlined by CBS Sports, the CBT threshold for 2025 was $241 million. Tax rates escalate the more you exceed the threshold, and since LA has repeatedly paid the CBT, they were hit with the highest tax rates.

Those rates include a 110% tax on every dollar spent over $301 million — known as the “Steve Cohen tax,” after the Mets’ extravagant-spending owner.

L-R: The star-studded LA pitching rotation of Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Blake Snell, and Tyler Glasnow. John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Fittingly, Cohen’s squad ranked second behind the Dodgers on the list of nine teams that were sent CBT bills this season, charged $91.6 million for its $346.7 million CBT payroll headlined by Juan Soto’s 15-year, $765 million megadeal signed ahead of the season. 

The Yankees rounded out the top three with a $319.5 million CBT payroll and $61.8 million CBT tax, followed by the Phillies, Blue Jays, Padres, Red Sox, Astros and Rangers. 

In total, the nine teams combined for just under $403 million owed in CBT.

Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto at the Dodgers’ championship parade on Nov. 3 in LA. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

According to the collective bargaining agreement, the first $3.5 million of that total goes toward player benefits. The remaining cash is split evenly, the first half funding player retirement accounts, and the second getting dispersed among non-CBT teams.

The 2023 Mets are the only other team to exceed a nine-figure CBT bill ($100.8 million). 

The Amazin’s became the first squad to pay more than $43.6 million in CBT for a single season — a mark that has since been topped eight times.

The Dodgers have shown no signs of cutting costs for next season, remaining active this offseason and already inking former Mets closer Edwin Diaz to a three-year, $69 million deal.



Source link

169M CBT Dodgers paying record series straight tax Winning World
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleHow Iona rallied to halt Vermont basketball's 3-game win streak
Next Article New Hampshire's Adrian Dubois named Vermont head soccer coach
VermontSportsNews
  • Website

Related Posts

Where to watch World Athletics Indoor Championships: Schedule, times, TV channel, live stream for 2026 track and field event

March 22, 2026

10 Olympic Sports That Are No Longer Allowed

March 21, 2026

Los Angeles Prepares for Major Tourism Influx as Global Sports Events Arrive – Knox News

March 21, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
About

Welcome to VermontSportsNews, your home for everything sports in Vermont and the greater New England area. We’re more than just a news site — we’re a passionate community dedicated to telling the stories that matter across every level of the game.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest LinkedIn VKontakte
Gallery
OUR CATEGOIRES
  • Vermont College
  • Vermont High School Sports
  • Vermont Charity Games
  • All Vermont Sports News
  • NEW England Sports News
  • US Sports News
  • World Sports News
  • Donate
Copyright © 2025. Vermontsportsnews All Right Reserved.
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.