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Jawaan Taylor (Image Via Getty)
The Kansas City Chiefs have officially released right tackle Jawaan Taylor to clear $20 million in salary cap space for the 2026 season. Taylor was scheduled to count $27.4 million against the cap.
By releasing him now, the team takes about $7 million in dead money but immediately frees up room to manage contracts and build the roster. The decision comes as Kansas City works through a tight cap situation despite the NFL salary cap rising above $300 million.The Chiefs reportedly needed to clear close to $58 million to stay financially flexible heading into free agency. Moving on from Taylor became one of the most direct solutions.
While he started 45 games for Kansas City and was part of a Super Bowl-winning offensive line, penalties and uneven pass protection drew criticism over the past two seasons. The front office clearly decided the cap relief outweighed the cost of keeping him.
What Jawaan Taylor’s release means for Patrick Mahomes, Jaylon Moore, Josh Simmons and the Kansas City Chiefs offensive line
Jawaan Taylor signed a four-year, $80 million deal with Kansas City in 2023 after beginning his career as a second-round pick with the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2019.
He was durable and available, starting every game he played for the Chiefs. But consistency became a talking point, especially in high-pressure moments protecting quarterback Patrick Mahomes.After the season ended, Taylor posted a message on Instagram that now feels like a farewell. He wrote, “Not the ending we imagined. But I’m thankful for the opportunity, the grind, the lessons, and the fans who never wavered.
Through wins, losses, and everything in between Chiefs Kingdom showed up. That never goes unnoticed. Forever Grateful.”Now attention turns to the offensive line. Jaylon Moore could step into the right tackle role after filling in late last season. If needed, the Chiefs could adjust his contract to ease future cap numbers. A projected line could include Josh Simmons at left tackle, Kingsley Suamataia at left guard, Creed Humphrey at center, Trey Smith at right guard, and Moore on the right side.
Depth pieces like Esa Pole and Hunter Nourzad remain options.General manager Brett Veach addressed the cap flexibility at the NFL Scouting Combine, saying, “With guys like Jawaan… our cap situation… I think we have $60 million in convertible contracts, too.” His comment showed the team still has room to restructure deals if necessary.Kansas City also owns six draft picks. However, with needs at pass rusher, running back, and defensive back, the team may not use an early selection on an offensive lineman. For now, this move is about financial balance and setting up another serious run next season.


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