NHL and NHLPA Accelerate Key Changes for the 2025-26 Season
The NHL and the NHL Players’ Association (NHLPA) have agreed to streamline the implementation of a salary cap for the playoffs and modifications to the long-term injury reserve (LTIR) rules for the 2025-26 season. This decision, which is part of the league’s new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), seeks to address existing concerns about salary cap management and playoff competitiveness. The current CBA agreement ends on September 15, 2026. The new agreement, announced in July, has a duration of four years. NHL general managers will be briefed on the CBA rules for this season at their meetings in Detroit this week.Playoff Salary Cap
The playoff salary cap rules seek to address a constant concern: the use of LTIR rules by some teams to field rosters that would exceed the regular salary cap.Previously, there was no salary cap in the Stanley Cup playoffs, which allowed teams to bring back players on LTIR at the end of the regular season. The salary cap compliance will only apply to players participating in a specific postseason game. Teams must submit a list of 18 players and two goalies to the NHL Central Registry before each playoff game. A “club average salary on the player list” will be calculated for that group, which must be below the team’s salary cap “upper limit.” The “club average salary” is the sum of the averaged amounts of the nominal salary value and bonuses for that season for each player on the list.I think overall it’s a good thing because it’s a competitive advantage. That’s how most people view it, especially if you can use it the right way.
Nazem Kadri, Calgary Flames center