Mark and Zygi Wilf - Minnesota Vikings owners
Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
After years of spending whatever it took to build a competitive Minnesota Vikings roster, it became painfully clear to agents and rival NFL teams last month at the NFL Draft combine that the days of free-spending and bottomless cash accounts at TCO Performance Center were over… at least for one offseason.
Minnesota’s featured signing of the offseason — QB Kyler Murray — cost a whopping $1.3 million. And beyond their new QB, acting GM Rob Brzezinski has moved slowly and intentionally, signing just two outside UFAs (CB) James Pierre and (P) Johnny Hekker, along with RFA offensive tackle (Ryan Van Demark).
MN Vikings on a money-saving mission this offseason
How frugal have the MN Vikings been compared to the other 31 NFL teams? In total dollars, they’ve spent the absolute least, coming in at $46.6 million — about $6.5 million less than NFC North rival Detroit, which has spent the second-least this offseason.
Rk Team Extensions FA Signings Total
29 Falcons $0 $62.4M $77.5M
30 Jaguars $37.6M $16.5M $54.3M
31 Lions $1.2M $52M $53.2M
32 Vikings $22.5M $20.6M $46.6M
Spotrac.com | *Tags and RFA tenders included in Total but not shown individually
Related: Vikings Unveil Updated QB Plan; How Practice Reps Will be Split
As you can see from the Spotrac table above, the Minnesota Vikings spent more this offseason on the contract extension for Eric Wilson (2YR/$22.5M) than they have for all six of their unrestricted free agent signings combined.
Compare those numbers to last offseason, when the Vikings landed on the other side of the spending table. Under Kwesi one year ago, Minnesota spent $270 million on free agents, $124 million on extensions for a whopping $394.2 million in total. That’s nearly $350 million more spent in the same categories in 2025 vs 2026.
In total, the MN Vikings spent the 7th-most of any team in the NFL last offseason, mostly driven by that gawdy $270 million in free agency signings.
Wilfs didn’t order Minnesota Vikings spending freeze?
Naturally, when word got out that the Vikings’ offseason spending sprees were over, fans and media assumed it was Wilf ownership that ordered the freeze. At the end of the day, it was their money that was set on fire last spring, after all.
But on Thursday morning, Kevin Seifert (ESPN) is reporting the contrary. While he didn’t get into specifics about who decided to clean up the organization’s financial books this offseason, the longtime NFL insider and current Minnesota Vikings beat reporter writes that it was not Zygi or Mark Wilf.
Sources have said the Wilf family ownership did not order a reduction in cash spending. But Murray’s arrival, the overall depth at quarterback and the swift rightsizing of the financial picture have clearly boosted the franchise’s esteem.
Kevin Seifert – ESPN
Related: Kirko Chainz Signing in Sin City
This was a bit surprising to read. It was so easy to assume it was the Wilfs trying to save their own money. And when you look back at how poorly their vast 2025 free agency dollars were spent, who could blame them?
Of course, I’m sure they didn’t have a lot of arguments for Rob Brzezinksi, when he came to them with a much tighter budget for 2026 free agents. While Seifert doesn’t mention the MN Vikings’ salary cap savant by name, there’s really only a handful of executives in Eagan who could trigger a spending freeze like what we’ve seen this season.
It had to be Rob Brzezinski, right…?
And given Rob is the organization’s money-manager, when it comes to player contracts, it makes a lot of sense that he’d be the guy trying to clean things up, either for himself — should he ultimately have the interim tag removed from his GM title — or for the Minnesota Vikings’ next general manager.
Don’t mistake their careful spending the past couple months for an unwillingness to spend at all the rest of this offseason. In his chat with Seifert, Brzezinski noted that the Vikings remain flexible and open to other opportunities between now and September, should they present themselves.
“I think we achieved some really important things that we wanted to achieve. And I think there were some other things that we could have forced just to try to fill another need and we didn’t do that. I feel really good about that because we don’t kick off until September. We have some dry powder. There are going to be opportunities that present themselves, and we want to be in a position to capitalize between now and September for those opportunities.”
Rob Brzezinski – via ESPN
Mentioned in this article: Mark Wilf NFL Free Agency NFL Offseason Rob Brzezinski Zygi Wilf
More About:Minnesota Vikings
Add MinnesotaSportsFan as a preferred source on Google.Add MinnesotaSportsFan as a preferred source on Google.