Major League Baseball extended its initial proposals regarding both domestic and amateur players on Thursday in its latest collective bargaining meeting with the MLB Players Association.
The proposal includes separate Domestic and International Drafts, with similar structures for each:
- Equal signing bonus pools in each Draft (starting at $200 million in the first Drafts)
- Hard-slotted 12-round Draft with unlimited “passed over player” signings
- Trading of Draft selections would be allowed with certain limitations
- Up to 10 players selected by MLB would be required to attend each MLB Draft, with a player in attendance receiving a $50,000 Draft Attendance Bonus
- Mandatory Draft Combine medical evaluations; more than 85% of invited players have attended the existing Draft Combine and 64% of invited players have participated in the medical program in the last three years
- The number of domestic Draft Lottery selections subject to the lottery would be reduced from 6 to 4, and no team would be eligible to receive a lottery selection in three consecutive years
- Competitive Balance selections would be eliminated
Draft picks would be eligible to be traded for the next year’s Draft – for example, 2029 Draft picks could be traded after the 2028 Draft. Clubs would not be allowed to trade their first-round picks in consecutive Drafts, while no team would be allowed to acquire more than three picks within the first three rounds (in addition to their own selections).
Domestic amateur proposal
More top high school players are choosing to play in college than ever before – 75 percent of domestic Major League players were developed through college baseball, 88 percent of whom were not ranked in high school. In light of this, the league believes that NCAA baseball has become increasingly crucial to developing future Major League players, many of whom are reaching the Majors quickly and experiencing success; since 2023, 82 college players have reached the big leagues within two years of being drafted, more than 2016-2022 combined.
“Over the last several years, college baseball has undergone a remarkable transformation,” the league said in a statement. “Expanded scholarships, NIL opportunities, revenue sharing, and significant investments in facilities and player development have made college baseball an increasingly important pathway that is producing Major League-ready talent at an accelerated rate. Today's top programs provide players with resources, competition, and national exposure that were unimaginable a decade ago.
“Our proposal is designed to build on that momentum to benefit the game at the college, Minor League and Major League levels. By creating a Draft system centered around college-aged players and making most college players eligible one year earlier, more players will benefit from both a college education and an elite development environment while reaching professional baseball – and ultimately the Major Leagues – more quickly.
“We believe these changes will strengthen college baseball and deepen fans' connection to the next generation of Major League stars. We look forward to working with the MLBPA throughout the bargaining process to modernize the domestic amateur system in a way that benefits players, clubs, and fans.”
In the proposal, players would have to be 20 years old by Sept. 1 of their Draft year and at least two years removed from high school graduation beginning with the 2028 Draft. College players, who represent 81 percent of drafted players annually, would be eligible to be drafted one year earlier than in the current system.
Players would not have to be active college players in order to be drafted; they can be selected after playing in the MLB Draft League or an independent league.
Under these eligibility rules, 86 percent of Top-40 college selections in last year’s Draft would have been eligible a year earlier.
Under the new rules, high school players would no longer be eligible, as the league notes that 85 percent of high schoolers drafted are committed to Power Four schools. These players would be eligible for full scholarships and NIL (Name, Image and Likeness)/revenue sharing dollars in college for two-plus years.
According to MLB, 75 percent of high school signees do not make the Majors, and those players have used only 12 percent of the Continuing Education funds in their Minor League contracts.
MLB’s proposal would not impact the number of affiliated teams in the Professional Development League system, which will remain at 120. The league said it will not be seeking reductions in the upcoming PDL negotiations in 2030.
International amateur proposal
MLB cited a number of what it called “persistent issues” in the current international system in proposing the installation of an International Draft.
The proliferation of unenforceable verbal agreements years before players are actually eligible to sign has resulted in players often leaving school at young ages to train full-time away from home. There has also been an increasing use of performance-enhancing substances, a disconnect between the highest signing bonuses and ultimate player success, and the market for older – or eligible – players is limited.
“It is long past time to reform the international amateur system in ways that would address longstanding challenges and benefit future players,” the league said. “The enhanced transparency of the International Draft that we are proposing is a common-sense step forward that best addresses the root causes of corruption in the current system.
“Our vision for the new international system reduces the pressure on young athletes by giving them the chance to grow and develop, keeps kids in school longer while they pursue a career in baseball, and creates more playing opportunities for the older players who are left behind in today’s system.”
Only 6 percent of international signings currently reach the Majors, while 44 percent of international players signed are released within three years. Per MLB, 83 percent of international signing bonuses go to players who did not reach the Majors, while more than 1,000 international players are released every year.
There are four key pillars to MLB’s international proposal:
Creating playing opportunities for both elite and non-elite players
MLB would expand its existing Amateur Scouting League into a scouting and development league for top Draft-eligible players each year. Players would receive housing, meals, a stipend and educational programs.
The league would also introduce an International Scouting & Medical Combine for the top 300 international prospects each year with a similar format to the existing MLB Draft Combine, which is in its sixth year.
Under the proposal, MLB will also provide continued playing and development opportunities for players over the age of 18 who do not sign during their first year of Draft eligibility. MLB will also collaborate with governments, federations, independent trainers and other baseball programs to expand baseball opportunities in players’ hometowns, allowing them to remain in school while pursuing baseball careers.
Raising the signing age by one year for all international players
Under the proposal, players would have to turn 18 by Sept. 1 of their Draft year (currently, players must be 17 by Sept. 1 of the year they sign).
This change would allow players to stay in school while pursuing a career in baseball while reducing the pressure on teenagers to show big-league potential before they are fully developed. According to a recent MLB survey of signed international players, 62 percent were 14 or younger when they stopped attending school.
Raising the minimum age would allow the most talented players to receive the most money following a more thorough development and evaluation process, while reducing the incentive of what the league called “unscrupulous adults” to use PEDs to turn young children into attractive prospects.
Implementation of an International Draft
An International Draft would preserve the same overall market of players who compete against each other in today’s international system, with no new countries being introduced.
The first Draft would maintain the current level of spending on international players – $200 million in the first year, equal to the signing bonus pool MLB is proposing for the separate Draft for players from the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.
A hard-slotted system would create transparency in the signing process, eliminating the practice of “handshake” agreements between teams and players. MLB also believes a Draft would result in “a fairer process,” with players being selected based on talent and merit at an appropriate age rather than on personal relationships between trainers and clubs when players are pre-teens.
Protections and regulations
As part of the proposal, MLB would work with the Dominican government, independent trainers and the MLBPA to establish the following protections and safeguards for players training in the Dominican Republic:
- Establishment of a code of conduct for independent trainers with appropriate penalties for violations
- Prohibiting any individual or firm from purchasing an interest in a player’s future signing bonus or salary, or loaning a player or his family money with the player’s future signing bonus or compensation as collateral
- Implementation of a lifetime ban from the baseball industry, and criminal penalties, for any person who provides performance-enhancing substances to a player
- A requirement that players who reside in an independent trainer academy prior to age 18 must remain enrolled in an education program approved by the Ministry of Education
