The San Francisco 49ers have continued shaping their roster after an injury-plagued 2025 season that still ended with a divisional-round appearance. With an eye on building stability for 2026, the team has brought back defensive lineman Sam Okuayinonu on a one-year contract worth $2.28 million, securing depth at a key position without stretching the salary cap.
Originally tendered at $3.5 million as a restricted free agent, Okuayinonu instead agreed to a reworked deal that lowers his cap hit while providing financial security. The contract includes a $1.6 million base salary, a $500,000 signing bonus, and $195,000 in additional bonuses, with $1.3 million fully guaranteed.
The adjustment reflects a calculated move by San Francisco to maintain flexibility while keeping a developing contributor in-house.
“49ers placed a $3.5 million tender on RFA Sam Okuayinonu but were able to negotiate and retain the DL at a significantly lower price — $2.28m cap hit — by offering a chunk of guaranteed money. $1.6m base salary, $500k signing bonus, $195k other bonuses. $1.3m of that fully GTD.” David Lombardi reported in a post on X.
Okuayinonu’s path to this deal has been anything but typical. After going undrafted in 2022 and spending a brief stint with the Tennessee Titans, he found a second opportunity with the 49ers.
Sam Okuayinonu’s role could quietly expand in 49ers’ 2026 rotation
While the contract itself signals financial prudence, the football implications may matter even more. Sam Okuayinonu appeared in 31 games across the last two years, including 12 starts in 2025 when injuries disrupted the defensive line.
During that stretch, he recorded 39 tackles, three sacks, and one forced fumble, offering steady production in a unit that needed reliability.
His performance showcased a blend of pass-rushing ability and run defense discipline, giving the coaching staff a versatile option along the line. Even if the 49ers enter 2026 with improved health up front, Okuayinonu’s contributions last season likely elevated his standing within the rotation.
From a roster-building perspective, this move reflects a broader strategy. Instead of overcommitting resources to deep pieces, San Francisco opted for a cost-controlled agreement that still rewards development.
The guaranteed portion of the deal gives Okuayinonu some financial assurance, though it does not lock in a roster spot, keeping competition intact heading into the season.
Given the unpredictable nature of injuries in the NFL, having a proven rotational defender under a team-friendly contract positions the 49ers well.
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