DJ Moore is officially a Buffalo Bill. The Chicago Bears and the Buffalo Bills finalized a trade Thursday morning, sending him to Western New York in a deal that immediately reshapes both franchises heading into the 2026 season. The move ends Moore’s three-year run in Chicago and opens a thrilling new chapter for one of the NFL’s most experienced pass-catchers. For a player who has spent the better part of a decade proving his worth at the highest level, this trade feels less like a setback and more like a second wind arriving at exactly the right moment.
The deal sends Moore to Buffalo in exchange for mid-round draft pick compensation — a modest return for a player who, at his peak, was considered one of the game’s most dangerous threats at the position. The timing of the move tells its own story, and both sides appear ready to move forward.
Moore and the Bears Part Ways
The writing had been on the wall in Chicago for some time. Despite suiting up for all 17 games last season, he posted career lows in both catches and receiving yards, finishing with just 682 yards — a number that spoke more to the offensive environment around him than to any decline in individual talent. Under first-year head coach Ben Johnson’s run-heavy scheme, Moore struggled to carve out a consistent role, and his chemistry with young quarterback Caleb Williams never fully developed the way the organization had envisioned when the partnership began.
The financial picture only accelerated the split. His $28.5 million cap hit for 2026 had become a growing burden for a Bears franchise with other roster priorities on the horizon. By moving him before the June 1 deadline, Chicago frees up roughly $16.5 million in cap space — money that can now be redirected toward reinforcing a roster with genuine playoff aspirations. It is a clean break that benefits everyone involved, even if parting ways with a proven veteran is never a straightforward decision.
A Reunion That Makes Perfect Sense
Perhaps the most compelling subplot surrounding this deal is the reunion it sets up in Buffalo. New Bills head coach Joe Brady previously worked alongside Moore during their shared time with the Carolina Panthers in 2020 and 2021. Those two seasons represented the most explosive stretch of Moore’s career — totaling 2,350 receiving yards and eight touchdowns across 32 games, numbers that reaffirmed his status as a legitimate No. 1 option when placed in the right system.
That pre-existing familiarity between Moore and Brady gives Buffalo a genuine advantage in getting him up to speed quickly. When you factor in Josh Allen at quarterback — arguably the most complete player in the league right now — this situation starts to look like one of the more underrated offseason acquisitions of the entire cycle. The prior relationship with Brady removes one of the biggest obstacles any new receiver faces when joining a team mid-offseason.
DJ Moore Fills a Real Void in Buffalo
The Bills have been searching for a legitimate wide receiver complement ever since parting ways with Stefon Diggs back in 2024. That void has loomed over the franchise for two full seasons, and this trade directly addresses it. With Moore’s salary fully guaranteed through 2026 and a portion of his 2027 contract set to guarantee in the coming days, he will be in Western New York for at minimum two full seasons — giving the Bills a genuine long-term answer at a position that has been unsettled for far too long.
At his best, Moore profiles as a true top-tier option opposite Allen’s other weapons. At a conservative estimate, he is an elite complementary piece — a receiver with four career 1,000-yard seasons who still has plenty left to offer. Either way, Buffalo just made its offense measurably better, and the ripple effects of that upgrade will be felt across the AFC East all season long.
Chicago Bets Everything on Its Young Core
For the Bears, moving on from Moore is not a retreat — it is a declaration of organizational intent. With Rome Odunze, Luther Burden, and tight end Colston Loveland all emerging as legitimate offensive weapons over the past season, Chicago no longer needs a high-priced veteran as the centerpiece of its passing attack. The front office is clearly committed to building around Caleb Williams and allowing the next generation of playmakers to grow into their roles together, without the shadow of a bigger name complicating the depth chart.
The draft capital gained in this transaction only adds to Chicago’s growing arsenal as the franchise enters what many believe could be its most pivotal offseason in over a decade. A leaner roster, a healthier cap, and a quarterback still in the early stages of his development — that combination suggests the Bears are not rebuilding. They are reloading, deliberately and with purpose. Moore‘s chapter in Chicago is officially closed, and for both sides, that may prove to be the best possible outcome for everyone involved.

