Seattle Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker during a press conference.
The Kenneth Walker franchise tag question has a real clock on it: the NFL’s tag window closes today at 4 p.m. ET, forcing the Seahawks to either tag Walker, let him hit the market, or keep working toward a long-term deal without the tag safety net.
And here’s the key:while ESPN’s Adam Schefter has reported Seattle is “unlikely” to use either the franchise or transition tag on Walker, “unlikely” isn’t final until the deadline passes.
Key Points
The tag deadline is today at 4 p.m. ET.
Schefter reported the Seahawks are unlikely to tag Kenneth Walker III.
The 2026 RB tag values are pricey: $14.293M (franchise) and $11.323M (transition).
It’s unlikely the Seahawks will use their franchise tag on running back and Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker, per league sources. The Seahawks have multiple free agents they want to retain and sign. They also will try to extend WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba. There are enough Super-Bowl tax… https://t.co/9xbtIgLNn7 pic.twitter.com/XdfkNk16kf
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) February 17, 2026
Kenneth Walker Franchise Tag: What Seattle Can Still Do Before 4 p.m. ET
If the Seahawks apply the non-exclusive franchise tag, Walker would be tied to Seattle on a one-year tender at the running back tag number, and he could negotiate with other teams,but any offer sheet would require the signing team to give up draft picks if Seattle declines to match (that compensation is part of why teams prefer the non-exclusive tag). The transition tag is cheaper, but it typically gives teams less leverage because it does not come with draft compensation if the player leaves.
Mechanics that matter today:
Franchise tag (RB): $14.293M for 2026
Transition tag (RB): $11.323M for 2026
Seattle’s decision isn’t just “pay him or don’t”—it’s whether to lock in cost certainty now, or risk the market later.
Why Seahawks Are Reportedly “Unlikely” to Tag Kenneth Walker
The most important report to date remains Schefter’s: Seattle is unlikely to use the franchise or transition tag on Walker.
That lines up with how rarely the Seahawks have leaned on tags in the John Schneider era, and with the broader league trend that teams often prefer extensions over one-year tenders that can sour relationships.
If Seattle doesn’t tag Walker by 4 p.m. ET, the leverage shifts. The team can still negotiate, but it loses the ability to unilaterally keep him off the open market with a tag in this window.
Kenneth Walker Stats: 2025 Season and Career Snapshot
No matter where you land on the Kenneth Walker franchise tag debate, his recent production is why this is a real conversation.
2025 regular season (Seahawks):
221 carries, 1,027 rushing yards, 5 rushing TD, 4.6 YPC
Postseason: 313 rushing yards, 4 TDs, 4.8 YPC, Super Bowl MVP
Career (through 2025):
821 carries, 3,555 rushing yards, 4.3 YPC, 29 rushing TD
133 receptions, 1,005 receiving yards, 2 receiving TD
If Walker isn’t tagged, Seattle’s backfield planning has to account for the possibility that he’s negotiating elsewhere as soon as free agency opens. That can affect how the Seahawks allocate resources across multiple needs, not just RB.
ESPN’s most recent mock draft suggests the Seahawks will need to draft a running back in the early rounds to bolster their running back room.
What happens next?
Between now and 4 p.m. ET, the Seahawks’ options are simple but consequential: tag Walker, don’t tag him, or reach a last-minute extension (rare, but not impossible).
If the team follows the current reporting and doesn’t tag him, the next developments to watch are:
whether Seattle and Walker’s camp keep talks alive into the start of free agency, and
which RB-needy teams emerge as credible suitors the moment the market opens.