Brenton Strange reportedly agreed to a three-year Jaguars extension worth up to $48 million with $25 million guaranteed, according to reporting from his agents. The deal follows a 2025 season in which the tight end caught 46 passes for 540 yards and three touchdowns in 12 games.
The Jacksonville Jaguars reportedly agreed to a three-year contract extension with tight end Brenton Strange, a deal that would be worth up to $48 million with $25 million guaranteed.
The agreement was first reported Tuesday, with the terms attributed to Strange's agents Jim Ivler, JR Roggio and Jon Perzley of SPORTSTARSNYC. The reported extension would keep Jacksonville's starting tight end under contract before he reaches a pricier deal year.
Why the Jaguars moved now
Strange is coming off the most productive season of his career. In 2025, he caught 46 passes for 540 yards and three touchdowns in 12 games, establishing himself as a steady part of Jacksonville's offense.
The move also fits a broader Jaguars pattern this offseason. Team brass has been working through extension and cap decisions around young core players, and a recent salary-cap analysis had identified Strange as one of the likeliest candidates for a new deal.
Jacksonville selected Strange in the second round of the 2023 NFL Draft, and the reported extension signals the team's willingness to keep homegrown offensive talent in place.
What still needs confirmation
The agreement is reported rather than formally confirmed by the Jaguars. The club has not yet provided a public announcement in the reporting reviewed, so the exact filing and structure of the contract still need official confirmation.
If the deal is finalized as reported, it would set an important price point for young tight ends with similar production and give Jacksonville more stability around a key offensive position.
Revision note
Initial automated publication.
