Ja’Quan McMillian has gone from undrafted afterthought to one of the Broncos’ more important defensive pieces, and that rise is now putting him on the extension radar.
The cornerback, who landed at No. 18 in our top 25 Broncos of 2026, spent 2022 on the practice squad before getting a one-game promotion to the active roster. By 2023, he had made the 53-man roster and carved out a real role on defense.
Since then, he’s stacked up six interceptions and 24 pass breakups over the past three seasons, while also giving Denver value as a blitzer with seven sacks and 11 quarterback pressures. His interception against the Buffalo Bills in the AFC divisional round of the playoffs last season may be the play that sticks most in the mind.
Sean Payton has already hinted that McMillan matters to what comes next, and McMillan’s agent said in June that talks with the Broncos have started. The question now is what kind of money that turns into.
One thing that makes the discussion tricky is how Denver views him. McMillan has shown he can handle work as a No. 2 cornerback, but the Broncos may see him more as a slot defender. That could soften the price a bit, though it doesn’t mean he’ll come cheaply.
He’s currently on a second-round restricted free agent tender worth $5.767 million, so the best way to frame his next deal is by looking at corners with similar production and usage rather than pure star power.
Marcus Jones of the New England Patriots looks like a strong measuring stick. A third-round pick in 2022, Jones has played 48 games over the past four seasons and started 22, with six interceptions and 28 passes broken up. He signed a three-year, $36 million extension in 2025 that included $17.5 million fully guaranteed, plus another $4.5 million in injury-only guarantees.
Montaric Brown is another comp. The Jacksonville Jaguars corner was a seventh-round pick in 2022, has started 29 games, and has three interceptions and 12 pass breakups in his career. Brown landed a three-year, $31.8 million deal with $20.65 million fully guaranteed.
Then there’s Cor’Dale Flott, now with the Tennessee Titans. Flott had plenty of starts but never really separated himself as a No. 2 corner with the New York Giants, finishing four seasons there with three interceptions and 25 pass breakups. The Titans paid him three years and $45 million, with $32 million fully guaranteed.
Of those deals, Jones may be the closest match for McMillan. If that’s the right comp, McMillan’s number could land above Jones’ contract. And if Denver waits and he turns in another strong season, the price could climb closer to the Flott range.
For now, McMillan looks like the Broncos player most likely to get extended before the regular season starts among those set to hit free agency in 2027. Cap constraints mean Denver won’t keep everybody, but this is one they should be able to manage.
A four-year, $56 million deal with $30 million fully guaranteed could be enough to keep him in Denver. But if the Broncos let the season start without a new contract in place, McMillan could easily push past that.
The Broncos have shown they’re willing to reward players who earn it, including before and during the 2025 season. If they view McMillan as a real part of the future, a deal before kickoff wouldn’t be a surprise.
Next up is the other cornerback in line for an extension: Riley Moss.
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