
A month removed from the NFL Draft, the Kansas City Chiefs still hadn’t inked either of their first-round picks — former LSU cornerback Mansoor Delane and Clemson defensive tackle Peter Woods.
After getting deals done with their other five rookies, Kansas City was sitting with an estimated $5.5 million in cap space. That wasn’t nearly enough breathing room to comfortably fit Woods’ projected $3.3 million rookie cap hit, let alone Delane’s estimated $7.6 million first-year charge. We have known the front office would need to clear room to sign another dynamic playmaker to further bolster their dreams of the Lombardi this season.
Now, Chiefs Kingdom finally has its answer.
Chiefs Solve Their Biggest Contract Problem With This One Move

While the Kansas City Chiefs were getting back to work at voluntary OTAs this week, the front office was busy making a few roster-building plays of its own.
According to Spotrac’s Michael Ginnitti, the Chiefs converted $9.685 million of defensive end George Karlaftis’ 2026 base salary into a signing bonus on Wednesday, freeing up roughly $7.7 million in cap space for the upcoming season.
That move temporarily bumps Kansas City to about $13.3 million under the salary cap. But don’t expect that cushion to last long. First-round picks Mansoor Delane and Peter Woods are still waiting on their rookie deals, and once those contracts hit the books, the Chiefs are projected to have roughly $4.4 million in cap room remaining.
Karlaftis always looked like an obvious restructure candidate. With the star pass rusher locked up through 2030, the Chiefs can spread the cap hit across five seasons, turning a short-term cap crunch into a much more manageable situation. His 2026 cap number drops to $7.4 million, while his 2027 hit jumps to $17.2 million. From 2028 through 2030, Karlaftis is slated to carry cap charges north of $23 million per season.
It’s also worth remembering that offseason cap math operates under the NFL’s Top-51 rule. Only the 51 highest cap hits count during the offseason. So when Delane and Woods sign, they’ll effectively bump lower-salaried contracts off the books. That’s why the real cap impact is usually far smaller than the headline figures suggest. More so, they have considerable cap space to sign another playmaker that is currently on the market.
And in case Chiefs Kingdom needed any more proof that rookie signings are around the corner, Karlaftis, Delane, and Woods were all spotted arriving at OTAs in a team social media video on Tuesday. Kansas City is on the practice field through Thursday, with Andy Reid and select players expected to address the media after the final workout.