BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – FEBRUARY 20: Team United States forward Brady Tkachuk #7 celebrates with Matthew Tkachuk #19 after scoring against Team Canada goaltender Jordan Binnington #50 in the first period of the NHL 4 Nations Face-Off Championship Game at TD Garden on February 20, 2025, in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
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No-trade and no-move clauses have become so prevalent across the NHL that many fans now view them as a routine feature of professional sports contracts. But that perception does not reflect the broader North American sports landscape.
Compared with other major leagues, the NHL stands apart. While player movement protections exist elsewhere, they are far less common. Here is an approximate breakdown of no-trade and no-move clauses by league:
NFL: 8
NBA: 2
MLB: 35
NHL: 245
The contrast is remarkable. While the other three leagues treat movement restrictions as rare contractual exceptions, the NHL has made them an industry norm.
There are a few reasons NHL teams offer so many no-trades.
1) NHL Salaries Are Lower Than Those of Other Major Sports
The NHL operates in a different financial universe than the NBA, MLB, and NFL as there is a significant gap between salaries. Here’s what the average star makes in each of the four leagues:
NHL superstar: $10–16 million
NBA superstar: $50–70 million
MLB superstar: $40–70 million
Elite NFL quarterback: $50–65 million
Since NHL players earn significantly less than their counterparts in the other major leagues, they often negotiate for certainty rather than seeking a bump in pay. They will give up income for a no-move since it provides players with control over their personal life.
2) Hockey’s Culture Has Traditionally Valued Loyalty
Hockey has long embraced the idea of organizational loyalty. Players are expected to commit themselves to a franchise, while teams frequently reward veterans with contractual stability.
General managers have often viewed no-move clauses as a sign of mutual trust rather than merely a contractual concession. So it ties into hockey culture.
3) The NHL’s Salary Cap Encourages Creative Negotiations
The NHL’s hard salary cap limits how much clubs can spend. When teams reach the financial ceiling, they often have little flexibility to increase a player’s salary. So they offer the perk of a no-move to incentivize a signing.
While a no-trade or no-move clause doesn’t cost the club cap space, it can be pretty valuable o the player.
Why Other Sports Don’t Need Them
The absence of movement clauses in other leagues is not accidental. Each league has alternative mechanisms that provide players with protection.
NFL contracts are largely non-guaranteed. Teams can release players at any time, making long-term movement protection far less practical.
MLB players acquire significant rights through service time. A player with at least 10 years of MLB service, including the last 5 consecutive years with the same club, earns the right to veto any trade.
The NBA makes full no-trade clauses extremely difficult to obtain. To qualify, a player generally must have at least eight years of NBA service and four years with his current team.
NHL hasn’t merely normalized movement restrictions; it has built a system where control over movement is itself a central currency in player-team negotiations.
For now at least.
