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As J.T. Realmuto prepares to enter free agency, his future with the Phillies is in question.

Three Realistic Landing Spots for J.T. Realmuto

J.T. Realmuto is the top catcher available in free agency this offseason. This is in no small part due to his elite defense, which is rare behind the plate these days. He figures to attract interest from contenders and playoff aspirants alike.

Apr 26, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Philadelphia Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto (10) breaks his bat on a single against the Chicago Cubs during the fourth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

At 35 on Opening Day, most analysts expect Realmuto to prefer a short, high-value deal (teams and writers are projecting one- or two-year contracts rather than long multiyear pacts). Below are three realistic landing spots, why each makes sense, and plausible contract offers the market could clear.

Most Likely Landing Spots for J.T. Realmuto in Free Agency

Philadelphia Phillies — The Home Reunion 

Realmuto has been the Phillies’ everyday catcher since the 2019 trade and has family ties and familiarity with the organization and spring-training area—factors that make a return appealing to both sides. Philadelphia has publicly prioritized retaining key pieces as rivals in the NL East re-tool, and the club would prefer to plug Realmuto back into a pitching staff and lineup he already understands. That continuity is valuable for a team chasing postseason stability.

Likely Contract: 1–2 years, $18–24 million per year (roughly $20–40 million total).

Most offseason forecasting (and veteran catcher market logic) points to a short-term deal for a 35-year-old backstop—enough money to reward him and keep Philadelphia competitive without a long-term commitment. A 2-year, $40M deal with a team option or a club option/partial no-trade protection for Year 2 is a realistic structure the Phillies could offer to balance payroll flexibility and roster certainty.

Pittsburgh Pirates — Why a Realmuto Signing Makes Sense

The Pirates are emerging from a long rebuild with a young core—Paul Skenes, Jared Jones, Mitch Keller, Termarr Johnson, and Oneil Cruz—finally aligning toward contention. What they lack is an experienced, stabilizing catcher who can guide one of MLB’s best young pitching groups. Realmuto provides that immediately.

He also fits Pittsburgh’s roster model: affordable young talent across the board, creating space for a short, targeted splash on a veteran difference-maker. Realmuto’s reputation for preparing pitchers, controlling the running game, and handling high-pressure environments would be invaluable to a rotation built around two potential Cy Young–caliber arms.

Pittsburgh’s front office has quietly signaled a willingness to increase spending as the team approaches its competitive window, and adding a high-character catcher who instantly raises the floor of the pitching staff aligns perfectly with that timeline. Realmuto would also ease the development of young catchers in the system, providing mentorship without blocking them long-term.

In a division where the Chicago Cubs, Milwaukee Brewers, and Cincinnati Reds have each taken steps forward, the Pirates adding a proven leader behind the plate could be the move that stabilizes their leap from “up-and-coming” to legitimate NL Central contenders.

Likely Contract: 1–2 years, $16–20 million per year (roughly $18–36 million total).

The Pirates aren’t a team that hands out long-term deals to aging veterans, but this is the rare case where a short, high-value contract makes sense for both sides:

  • Realmuto gets strong AAV on a shorter commitment.

  • Pittsburgh gets an immediate upgrade without long-term payroll risk.

  • A one-year deal with a mutual option for Year 2 or an incentive-laden structure tied to games caught could appeal to the Pirates’ front office.

A realistic Pirates offer: 1 year, $18 million with a mutual option for a second season at $20 million, plus incentives for catching games and postseason performance.

This structure would give the Pirates a stabilizing veteran presence during a critical competitive window—and give Realmuto a chance to work with one of the most exciting young pitching corps in baseball.

Tampa Bay Rays — Short-Term, High-Impact, Roster-Friendly

The Rays are often linked to smart, short-term upgrades that push them from good to great. Tampa Bay entered the offseason with questions at catcher and a front office comfortable leveraging short-term veteran signings while protecting long-term flexibility. Furthermore, Realmuto’s ability to handle a pitching staff and provide middle-of-the-order at-bats (relative to typical catcher production) makes him a logical target for a team that values positional defense and game management. Plus, Boston/Philly/NY markets make sense for family ties—but Tampa’s competitive window and roster construction make this plausible if dollars

Likely Contract: 1–2 years, $25–34 million (team-friendly structure)

Expect the Rays to pursue a one-year “win-now” deal with a second-year club option, or a two-year pact with lower AAV and performance escalators. A structure like 1 year $15–18 million + 1 club option at $15–20 million or 2 years, $30–34 million with incentives is consistent with Tampa Bay’s previous offseason behavior and Realmuto’s marketplace value.

The Last Word

Realmuto’s combination of defensive reputation, clubhouse polish, and still-useful offensive production means he’ll be the most sought-after catcher in free agency. The smart money is on a short-term contract (one or two years) rather than a long-term commitment—teams prefer flexibility at a position that carries high physical wear and age sensitivity. Philadelphia looks like the frontrunner because of fit and familiarity, but richer or more intriguing fits (Boston’s landing strip or Tampa Bay’s tactical acquisition) could swing the market depending on how aggressively contenders want to push to improve a thin catching market.

 

Main Photo Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

About Eddie Lennon, Staff Writer

Eddie was born and raised on Long Island, but now lives in Charlotte. He is an experienced sports writer who has been covering MLB since 2015 for various outlets. He has written for Fansided, The Manhasset Press, SneakerReporter, and Axcess Baseball. He went to High Point University.

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