Kyle Pitts has agreed to a three-year, $54 million contract extension with the Atlanta Falcons, the team that made him the fourth overall pick in 2021 and has now committed $36 million in fully guaranteed money to keep him through the 2028 season.
The deal carries an average annual value of $18 million, making it the third-largest contract for a tight end in NFL history on that measure, behind only two other established stars at the position. The extension replaces the franchise tag the Falcons had applied to Pitts for the 2026 season and was reached well ahead of the July 15 deadline the two sides faced to finalize a long-term arrangement.
A comeback season that earned the contract
The timing of the extension reflects a Falcons organization rewarding a player who delivered a breakout performance after three difficult injury-affected seasons. Pitts ranked second in the league among tight ends in receptions and receiving yards in 2025, catching 88 passes for 928 yards and five touchdowns. His body of work over the year provided the sustained evidence of elite-level production that the earlier years of his career had suggested was possible but had not consistently materialized.
The individual highlight of his 2025 campaign came in a December game that placed his name alongside the rarest company in NFL history. He caught 11 passes for 166 yards and three touchdowns, becoming the first tight end since 1996 to reach at least 150 receiving yards with three scores in a single game. The performance served as the clearest possible argument for why the Falcons needed to secure him long-term.
A career that had to be rebuilt from its own promise
Pitts arrived in Atlanta as one of the most controversial high selections in recent draft history, with many analysts questioning whether a tight end deserved to be taken that early in the first round. He answered those questions immediately. In his rookie season he became the first tight end to reach 1,000 receiving yards in a season since 1961 and made the Pro Bowl as the first rookie tight end to receive that recognition in more than two decades.
The three seasons that followed were defined by injuries and inconsistency, with Pitts failing to reach 700 receiving yards in any of them. The gap between the promise of his debut and the production of those middle years was a source of genuine concern in Atlanta. Last season resolved much of that uncertainty, and the extension is the Falcons’ formal acknowledgment that the player they believed they were getting in 2021 has finally arrived.
The Falcons’ offseason strategy takes shape
The Pitts extension is the second major commitment Atlanta has made to a core offensive player this offseason, following a four-year, $141 million deal for wide receiver Drake London completed three weeks ago. The next significant contract conversation on the franchise’s agenda involves its All-Pro running back, who will become the next priority for a front office that has been methodically locking in its most important offensive contributors.
The approach reflects a deliberate philosophy from the new leadership group overseeing the franchise, which is making retention of established young talent the foundation of its competitive vision. The organization’s president, head coach, and general manager have collectively invested in keeping the skill position core intact rather than allowing it to fracture through the pressures of free agency. With Pitts now secured through 2028 and London locked in, the offensive framework they are building around their quarterback has a much clearer shape.

