13 players tendered qualifying offer

November 7th, 2025

Thirteen players were tendered a qualifying offer (a one-year, $22.025 million deal for 2026) prior to Thursday’s deadline.

Those players have until 4 p.m. ET on Nov. 18 to accept. Players who accept qualifying offers are signed with their teams for the next season at the designated value. Those who don't accept remain free agents, and if a new team signs them, their old team receives Draft pick compensation.

Since the system was implemented in 2012, only 14 players to receive a QO have accepted it.

Here's a breakdown of the players who received a qualifying offer this year, along with some notable players who didn’t get one and others who were ineligible to receive one.

RECEIVED QO

Players listed in order of 2025 WAR (per FanGraphs)

, DH (Phillies)
2025 fWAR: 4.9

Schwarber’s walk year couldn’t have gone much better, as he led the NL in homers (56) and the Majors in RBIs (132) with a career-high 150 OPS+ over 162 games, wrapping up his four-year, $79 million contract with the Phillies in grand fashion. During the course of that deal, only Aaron Judge had more home runs than Schwarber’s 187. He's also been an impactful postseason performer, hitting 23 playoff dingers.

, OF (Cubs)
2025 fWAR: 4.5

The top player in the 2025-26 free-agent class, Tucker will enter his age-29 season having recorded 23.4 WAR (per FanGraphs) and a 145 OPS+ since the beginning of 2021. Despite dealing with a hairline fracture in his right hand and a left calf strain in 2025, he still posted his third career 20-20 season (22 HR, 25 SB) with a 143 OPS+ over 136 games for the Cubs, who acquired him from the Astros in December.

, SP (Phillies)
2025 fWAR: 4.0

Suárez has posted a 3.39 ERA over 116 starts since joining the Phillies’ rotation in 2021, the 13th-best mark among MLB starters during that span (min. 100 starts). He also has an impressive track record of playoff success, with a lifetime 1.48 ERA over 42 2/3 innings in the postseason.

, SP (Astros)
2025 fWAR: 4.0

Perhaps the best starter in a market lacking a true ace, Valdez has found a formula for consistent success with the Astros. The lefty owns a 3.23 ERA over 973 innings since the beginning of 2020, combining solid strikeout numbers with a heavy dose of ground balls.

, SS (Blue Jays)
2025 fWAR: 3.8

After recording a .598 OPS over 81 games in an injury-plagued 2024 season, Bichette entered ’25 needing a strong year to recuperate his stock ahead of free agency. He delivered in a big way, looking like his old self while hitting .311 with 18 homers, 94 RBIs and an .840 OPS.

, SP (Padres)
2025 fWAR: 3.4

The results have been inconsistent, but Cease has excellent stuff and has proven to be quite durable. The right-hander led all starters (minimum 1,000 swings) with a 33.8% whiff rate in 2025, which marked his fifth straight season with at least 214 K’s and 32 games started.

, OF (Yankees)
2025 fWAR: 3.2

One of the biggest surprises of 2025, Grisham set career highs in a number of categories this past season, including homers (34), RBIs (74), walks (82) and OPS (.812). That was a big step up from 2022-24, when he slashed .191/.298/.353 with 39 home runs in 381 games.

, 2B (Tigers)
2025 fWAR: 2.6

The Yankees didn’t extend a qualifying offer to Torres when he was a free agent last offseason, so he was still eligible to receive one from the Tigers, who signed the second baseman to a one-year, $15 million deal in December 2024. Torres made the All-Star team for Detroit but regressed in the second half (.659) and finished with 16 homers, 74 RBIs and a .745 OPS (108 OPS+), numbers in line with his 2024 production.

, RP (Mets)
2025 fWAR: 2.0

Díaz didn’t receive a qualifying offer the last time he was a free agent at the end of the 2022 campaign, as the Mets re-signed him to a five-year, $102 million deal (a record for a reliever) before the QO deadline. Díaz, who finished 2025 with a 1.63 ERA and a 13.3 K/9, opted out of his contract this offseason.

, SP (Brewers)
2025 fWAR: 1.8

Woodruff has missed substantial time due to injuries in his career -- including all of 2024 following right shoulder surgery -- but few starters have been better on a per-inning basis since ’19. Before a right lat strain put him back on the shelf in September, Woodruff had a 3.20 ERA and a 5.93 K/BB over 12 starts for the Brewers.

, SP (D-backs)
2025 fWAR: 1.1

The D-backs shipped off a number of pending free agents at the Trade Deadline but ended up holding onto Gallen, who recorded a career-worst 4.83 ERA over 33 starts in 2025 -- a far cry from his 3.29 ERA across ’19-24.

, SP (Cubs)
2025 fWAR: 0.9

Although Imanaga had a 3.28 ERA and a 5.39 K/BB over 54 starts in 2024-25, the Cubs declined their three-year, $57 million club option on the lefty at the end of the 2025 season. Imanaga subsequently turned down his $15 million player option for 2026, becoming a free agent as a result.

, SP (Padres)
2025 fWAR: 0.8

King made a successful transition to a full-time starting job in 2024, finishing seventh in the NL Cy Young Award voting. He was on his way to another outstanding year in ’25 before injuries intervened, costing him roughly half the season.

NOTABLE PLAYERS WHO DID NOT RECEIVE QO

INELIGIBLE FOR QO

Not every free agent can receive a QO. Players who have previously received a QO are ineligible, which means these free agents were not eligible to receive one:

(Mets), (Angels), (Blue Jays), (Yankees), (Red Sox), Alex Cobb (Tigers), Michael Conforto (Dodgers), Patrick Corbin (Rangers), Jason Heyward (Padres), (Braves), Kenley Jansen (Angels), (Reds), Martín Pérez (White Sox), Marcell Ozuna (Braves), (Phillies), (Phillies), Carlos Santana (Cubs), Max Scherzer (Blue Jays), (Angels), Justin Turner (Cubs), Justin Verlander (Giants)

Players who weren't continuously with an organization, either in the Minors or Majors, from Opening Day until the end of the regular season are also ineligible. Notable free agents in this category who weren’t mentioned above include:

(Phillies), (Mets), (Rangers), (Braves), (Mariners), (Padres), (Mets), (Mariners), (Royals)

COMPENSATION AND PENALTIES

If a team gives a qualifying offer to a player who then signs elsewhere, the club that lost the player is eligible for Draft pick compensation the following year.

Meanwhile, any team that signs a player who has rejected a qualifying offer is subject to the loss of one or more Draft picks, though a team's highest first-round pick is exempt from forfeiture. (Players who are unsigned after the start of the MLB Draft in the year that follows the rejection of their qualifying offer are no longer tied to Draft pick compensation and can be signed without their new club needing to forfeit a Draft pick.)

For details on how compensation and penalties are determined for qualified free agents, click here.