The Carolina Panthers made the expected move on Bryce Young, but that does not make it a small one.
Carolina picked up the fifth-year option on Young’s rookie contract, the team announced on Wednesday, April 29, keeping the former No. 1 overall pick under contract through the 2027 season. The Panthers described the decision as “easy” and one that had been made months earlier, with the paperwork filed this week.
For Young, it is another marker in a career that looked much less settled not long ago. For the Panthers, it locks in two more seasons of quarterback control while the franchise continues building around him after his best year as a pro.
Young set career highs in 2025 with 3,011 passing yards, 23 touchdown passes, a 63.6% completion rate and an 87.8 passer rating, according to the team. The Panthers also credited him with six fourth-quarter or overtime game-winning drives last season, giving him 12 since he entered the league in 2023.
Bryce Young’s Fifth-Year Option Gives Panthers More Time
The fifth-year option does not guarantee Young will play out the 2027 season on that number. It does, however, give the Panthers a cleaner runway.
Over The Cap lists Young’s 2027 option salary at $25.904 million, fully guaranteed once exercised. The site also lists his 2026 cap charge at a little more than $12 million, meaning Carolina still has one more relatively inexpensive year before the option season arrives.
That matters because quarterback prices can move quickly. If Young continues improving, the Panthers can negotiate from a position of certainty rather than urgency. If they want to wait, they already have him under contract for two more seasons.
The option also makes clear that Carolina’s decision-makers are not treating Young’s 2025 season as a fluke. The franchise has moved from evaluating whether Young could become the answer to figuring out how aggressively to build around him.
Associated Press reporter Steve Reed reported that general manager Dan Morgan has repeatedly said the Panthers are pleased with Young’s progress and that the goal would be to sign him to a long-term deal, though Carolina still has time to handle that decision.
Panthers Are Building the Offense Around Bryce Young
The timing is also important because Carolina’s offense is being reshaped around Young.
The Panthers noted that Young is now working with a young receiving group that includes Tetairoa McMillan, Jalen Coker, Xavier Legette, Chris Brazzell II, John Metchie III, Jimmy Horn Jr. and others, with veteran David Moore also in the room. Carolina also added protection help by signing former Green Bay Packers starter Rasheed Walker and drafting offensive tackle Monroe Freeling after Ikem Ekwonu’s injury absence.
That is the real football significance of the option. Carolina is no longer just asking Young to survive. The Panthers are trying to give him enough stability to prove what his ceiling can be.
Young’s late-game production gives the Panthers a clear reason for optimism. Carolina’s team site noted that Young had a 101.2 passer rating in one-score games last season, trailing only Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson, and that he led the NFL with 285 passing yards on fourth downs.
Those numbers matter for a team still learning how to win close games. They also fit the Panthers’ offensive identity. Carolina led the league with 27 fourth-down conversions, according to the team, and Young’s ability to operate in those situations became one of the clearest signs of his growth.
Bryce Young’s Contract Decision Is a Vote of Confidence
There was little drama about whether Carolina would exercise the option. The larger message is what the decision confirms.
Young is no longer being discussed only through the lens of his difficult rookie season. He is being treated as the quarterback the Panthers can build around, at least through the next stage of the franchise’s climb.
That does not remove the pressure. It sharpens it.
The Panthers have Young under contract through 2027. They have invested in receivers and offensive line help. They have seen enough improvement to make the option decision early and publicly.
Now the next question becomes bigger than whether Young is Carolina’s quarterback for the next two years. It is whether he plays well enough to force the Panthers into a much larger commitment before the option year ever arrives.
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