Tyreek Hill became a pending free agent February 16 when the Miami Dolphins announced their intention to release the five-time All-Pro receiver. His looming free agency this offseason represents one of the most intriguing situations among available wide receivers, complicated significantly by his ongoing recovery from a severe knee injury sustained during the 2025 season.
Hill will turn 32 on March 1 and hit the free agency market when the new NFL league year begins mid-March. Any team considering signing Hill must evaluate his availability and recovery timeline carefully before committing resources. The injury that ended his 2025 season continues influencing his market value and timeline for potential return.
What happened during the injury
Hill suffered a severe knee injury early in the 2025 season during a Week 4 game against the New York Jets. The then-Dolphins receiver caught a short pass from quarterback Tua Tagovailoa before becoming twisted with Jets defensive back Malachi Moore at the play’s end. Cameras captured Hill grabbing at his leg immediately after the injury, and he required a cart to leave the field.
Subsequent medical evaluation confirmed a dislocated knee with multiple ligament tears, including an ACL rupture. The severity of the injury immediately ended Hill’s 2025 season and initiated a lengthy recovery process for the upcoming year.
The five-phase rehabilitation process
Recovery from dislocated knee injuries with ACL tears typically requires 9-12 months or longer before returning to competition. Orthopedic specialists outline a five-stage rehabilitation approach for injuries like Hill’s.
Phase one spans the first six weeks, focusing on joint bracing, pain management, and isometric muscle activation in the quadriceps and hamstrings to stabilize the knee. Phase two occupies the following six weeks as patients progress from limited motion toward fuller range of motion while beginning leg strengthening exercises like squatting and leg presses.
Phase three represents the longest phase, lasting approximately three months. This phase includes more aggressive strengthening combined with light agility work including cutting movements. Five months removed from his September injury, Hill likely progresses through this phase currently.
Phase four spans three or more months, pushing Hill toward return readiness through sport-specific training and acceleration/deceleration drills. This phase gradually reintroduces full contact, cutting, and pivoting while monitoring for discomfort, swelling, or knee instability.
Phase five represents the full return to competition, with the initial three months including continued maintenance, load management, and monitoring.
Current rehabilitation status
Hill is most likely progressing through phase three approximately five and a half months from his injury and subsequent surgery. Based on typical rehabilitation timelines, he remains roughly one month away from beginning football-specific activities that characterize phase four.
Phase four activities—the sport-specific drills and contact work—represent the benchmarks most teams would likely want to observe before committing to signing Hill. His progression through this critical phase will substantially influence team interest and contract valuations.
Return timeline possibilities
A return by the start of the 2026 season remains possible depending on Hill’s rehabilitation progression. However, the uncertainty surrounding his injury recovery timeline may delay team interest in signing him during free agency. The injury’s severity suggests that many teams will approach cautiously rather than aggressively pursuing the veteran receiver.
Any team signing Hill in free agency will likely offer contracts at discounted rates compared to what his market value would have been before the injury. The combination of his age, injury severity, and uncertainty about return timeline creates substantial risk from team perspectives.
Free agency implications and market timing
The timing of Hill’s free agency creates additional complexity. The official free agency period begins March 9, while Hill officially hits the market mid-March when the new league year begins. Teams will need to balance interest in Hill’s potential upside against uncertainty about his actual availability and performance level upon return.
Veteran receivers with fewer injury concerns will likely command attention during early free agency negotiations. Hill’s recovery status may force him to wait longer for team interest unless a club decides his potential return value justifies the injury risk. The slower market approach could ultimately benefit Hill if his rehabilitation progresses smoothly, as teams reassessing their receiver situations later in free agency might find him more attractive.
What teams need to see
Before committing significant resources to Hill, teams will want documented evidence of successful progression through rehabilitation phases. Sport-specific training completion and demonstrated ability to perform cutting, pivoting, and acceleration/deceleration drills provide concrete indicators of readiness.
Teams will also monitor for any signs of lingering knee instability, swelling, or discomfort that might suggest incomplete healing. The high-risk nature of knee injuries, particularly ACL tears, means teams will demand reassurance that Hill’s knee has fully stabilized before investing.
Looking ahead to 2026
Hill’s 2026 season participation remains genuinely uncertain. While a season return is possible, late-season return or even extending into 2027 remains realistic given typical ACL recovery timelines. Teams evaluating Hill must accept that his involvement in 2026 may be limited or nonexistent.
The uncertainty doesn’t eliminate Hill’s potential value. A healthy Hill at any point during 2026 provides meaningful offensive capabilities. However, teams must weigh that potential against the risk of signing a recovering veteran receiver when other options without injury concerns exist.

