Chicago Cubs and slugger Kyle Tucker agree on a $16.5 million salary for 2025 to avoid arbitration
Jan 16, 2025
Kyle Tucker’s introduction to the Chicago Cubs organization won’t involve an arbitration hearing during spring training.
The Cubs and their new slugger have agreed to a $16.5 million salary for 2025 to avoid arbitration, a source confirmed to the Tribune on Thursday. Tucker had filed at $17.5 million while the Cubs were at $15 million, which had been the largest gap among arbitration-eligible players who had not reached terms with their respective teams.
It settles the contract situation for the 27-year-old outfielder heading into the team’s annual fan convention this weekend, where Tucker’s first taste of the Cubs experience potentially could have featured awkward questions about his short-term contract situation ahead of his free agency following the season.
The Cubs acquired Tucker on Dec. 13 from the Houston Astros, adding a star to the middle of their order. Despite missing nearly three months with a right shin fracture last season, Tucker still put up 4.7 WAR and hit 23 home runs in only 78 games. It wasn’t far off what he delivered in 2022-23 (5.4 WAR each season in at least 150 games).
Now, Tucker and the Cubs can focus on the season ahead, which gets underway Feb. 9 when pitchers and catchers hold their first workout in Mesa, Ariz.