Jordyn Brooks has been a highly productive starter during his two years with the Dolphins. The veteran linebacker remains under contract for one more year, and he is among the players Miami is interested in extending.

If Brooks is to work out a new Dolphins agreement, a bump in pay could be in store. Omar Kelly of the Miami Herald writes the 28-year-old is seeking a raise in the event an extension is signed. Brooks is currently set to collect $8.38MM in 2026, the final year of his 2024 free agent pact.

While playing out his rookie contract with the Seahawks, Brooks was a regular presence on defense and filled the statsheet. The former first-rounder was among many in his position to have his fifth-year option declined, however, leading to a departure on the open market. Brooks joined the Dolphins and has served as an every-down player since. He earned first-team All-Pro honors in 2025 after leading the NFL in tackles (183) while adding 3.5 sacks.

Brooks drew trade interest from the Dolphins this offseason, but no swap was worked out. Miami has not been shy with respect to moving on from veterans under new general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan. A short list of players remain in the team’s plans, though, and Brooks is on it. Sullivan indicated last month extension talks have taken place with Brooks, but nothing is imminent at this time.

22 inside linebackers are currently attached to an average annual value higher than Brooks. That includes 19 earning an average of $10MM or more per year, a figure the Texas Tech product could aim to surpass on his third career contract. Finances are of course tight right now for the Dolphins with the team carrying a dead money figure of $179MM, but any extension would lower his immediate cap charge and accommodating a Brooks raise in 2027 could be feasible.

Miami’s 14-man draft class includes linebackers Jacob Rodriguez and Kyle Louis. Those two are in position to compete for a defensive role, although veteran Tyrel Dodson joins Brooks as a holdover from 2025. It will be interesting to see if the latter has a new deal in place by Week 1 or if he enters 2026 as a pending free agent.

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