Malcolm Roach’s Broncos deal is the kind of contract that gives Denver room to maneuver now and headaches later.
The Broncos already showed how much they value him when they extended him during the bye last season. Roach had originally signed a two-year, $7 million contract in 2024, then landed a three-year extension worth $26.3 million before that deal expired. The message was clear: Denver sees him as part of the plan for the next few seasons.
This season is locked in. Roach had a $5.131 million option bonus that the Broncos exercised back in March, turning that money into a signing bonus. He’s also due a $1.215 million base salary and a $510K per-game roster bonus, and all of it is fully guaranteed.
The real intrigue starts after that.
Roach is due a $5.145 million option bonus in 2027, and the Broncos have until September 1 to decide whether to exercise it. If they do, it gets treated like a signing bonus; if they don’t, it becomes base salary. He also has another $1.345 million that counts as base salary either way, plus a $510K per-game roster bonus.
Some of Roach’s 2027 money was guaranteed when he signed, and the rest became fully guaranteed on March 15 of this year. In practice, that ties him to Denver for 2027.
In 2028, the setup changes. Roach is due an $8.4 million option bonus by September 1, plus another $1.39 million that counts as base salary even if the option is declined, along with a $510K per-game roster bonus. None of that 2028 money is guaranteed.
The Broncos also built in multiple void years for cap purposes, which is where this gets especially interesting. If Denver exercises every option bonus, Roach would carry nearly $12.4 million in dead money if he isn’t extended in 2029.
That gives the Broncos a choice, and it’s a familiar one: take the lower cap hit now by exercising future option bonuses, or leave more cap space on the books in those seasons and reduce the dead-money pain later if Roach walks in 2029.
There’s flexibility here, but there’s also risk. Denver could move on from Roach in 2028 if needed, since none of his money is guaranteed that year. The team would still have to absorb the dead money from any signing and option bonuses already exercised, and it might wait until after June 1 to make a cut so those charges can be spread out.
2027 is where the next major decision lands. The Broncos will have to choose between exercising the option bonus or declining it and paying that money as base salary instead. That would raise the cap charge in the short term, but it would also ease the burden down the road.
It may also help explain why Denver might be careful about spending all of its current cap space. Any unused room in 2026 carries into 2027, which could give the Broncos enough flexibility to decline Roach’s option bonus, count it as base salary, and still fit it under the cap.
For now, Roach is set to be with the Broncos for two more seasons, and the team’s decision to exercise his option bonus this year means the consequences are already lined up for later. Vance Joseph has already floated Roach as a candidate to fill the void John Franklin-Myers left on the Broncos’ defensive line.
The bottom line: Denver made Roach’s contract complicated on purpose. The next move is all about how the Broncos want to handle those option bonuses, and that will come down to what their cap situation looks like when the time comes.
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