On the other side of the 2026 MLB All-Star Game, fans can now look ahead to the second half of the season. But while October is the goal, another date looms large: Aug. 3, the MLB trade deadline.
Many races throughout the league are wide open, particularly in the AL, where the playoffs feel unattainable for very few teams. Late pre-All-Star surges from the Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox have taken two perceived sellers with coveted second half players and thrown their status into flux. And the Los Angeles Dodgers are still the team to beat, having gone into the break with the best record in baseball as the two-time defending champions.
There are plenty of major names on the market, to be sure. After last season saw two elite closers in Mason Miller and Jhoan Duran get moved, another big reliever name has been bandied about. Ten years after he was a major factor in the Cubs' World Series run after being acquired at the deadline, reliever strikeout leader Aroldis Chapman is again being mentioned as a big trade target.
This season is also a rarity in that multiple quality starting pitchers are seemingly available on the market. Tarik Skubal is, of course, the name flashing on the marquee. But other arms who would solid in the front-to-middle of the rotation depending on the landing spot like Joe Ryan, Reid Detmers, and Casey Mize are also on the block. Whether or not their teams will be willing to move them is in the air.
But there's a dearth of bats. Staying in Boston, Willson Contreras could be a contributor to the right situation. CJ Abrams seemed like a lock to get moved in December, but is now an All-Star starter on a team that has wild card aspirations. And catchers Hunter Goodman and Ryan Jeffers seem to have Rockies and Twins determined to hang onto them, respectively.
In short, things are a mess. Here's what to know to make sense of a deadline that has just as much potential to bring fireworks as it does to fizzle out like so many sparklers.
When is the the 2026 MLB trade deadline?
- Date: Aug. 3, 2026
- Time: 6 p.m. ET
The MLB trade deadline is at 6 p.m. ET, 5 p.m. CT, 4 p.m. MT, and 3 p.m. PT on Aug. 3. While some trades sometimes trickle in under the wire, that is when communications for teams to deal players must cease.
Key MLB trade deadline targets
This is by no means an exhaustive list, plenty of other names are on the block. But here are some of the top names being talked about heading into this year's deadline.
P Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers
Tarik Skubal might be the biggest starting pitcher trade deadline rental baseball has seen in almost 20 years. CC Sabathia being traded to the Brewers in 2008 before joining the Yankees is the last name that comes to mind. The Tigers' mega-ace and two-time defending Cy Young winner hasn't fully returned to form after getting a NanoScope procedure for loose bodies in May, but even so his ERA since his return is sitting at an outstanding 3.08 and he has 44 strikeouts to five walks in six starts. Skubal also has nine strikeouts in three of his last four starts, indicating his punchout stuff is still excellent while his control has not wavered since the surgery.
P Joe Ryan, Minnesota Twins
It was a bit shocking to see Griffin Jax and Jhoan Duran moved at last year's deadline while Joe Ryan stayed put. He arguably had the most value on the Twins roster at the time, and with plenty of control, he could have pulled in a decent haul. Now, the Twins are in a complicated situation. Ryan is a free agent after the 2027 season, and is having the best season of his career with a 2.85 ERA, 150 ERA+, and 2.77 FIP, all career-bests. Ryan is a frontline starter who could slot into any rotation, but the Twins, like the Tigers, play in a division that could be won by anyone who gets hot.
P Aroldis Chapman, Boston Red Sox
The 37-year-old Aroldis Chapman is, as it turns out, ageless. Even as his average velo dips (dips, not drops), he is still missing bats and his sinker is as devastating as ever. Though his walk rate is a bit up and his strikeout rate is a bit down from his outstanding 2025 (which would be inimitable for 99% of the league anyways), Chapman is one of the few high leverage relievers who might be available on the market. It carries echoes of 2016, when Chapman was traded to the Cubs and helped a World Series run. Ten years later, he has the potential to do the same thing.
P Sonny Gray, Boston Red Sox
Though Zack Wheeler made the headlines as an All-Star snub, Sonny Gray also has reason to gripe in what has been a return to form season for him. In the absence of Garrett Crochet, Gray has settled in as Boston's ace, pitching to 2.54 ERA to this point, a career best if it holds. He's a true five-pitch pitcher with three fastballs, whose cutter-sinker-four seam combo offsets his relatively low velo. Gray could be a boon to a team looking to shore up its rotation, should Boston move on from him.
OF Taylor Ward, Baltimore Orioles
This will be a stubbornness check for the Orioles, but Taylor Ward is the best rental bat on market. Even though Baltimore is just two games out of a wild card spot, and Ward is a right-handed bat who could make a difference to the right suitor. Will the Orioles clutch and hope to make a run, or will they move Ward, who is a premium player on this market?
C Ryan Jeffers, Minnesota Twins
Ryan Jeffers should be back from hamate surgery soon, so his value is TBD until teams actually see him play. But with a .292 batting average and an OPS of .942, Jeffers is the type of right-handed bat who could bolster a lineup. Though he doesn't bring elite power to the fold, he plays a position where offense like his can be hard to come by. Adding catchers is tricky, but Jeffers may be worth the flier.
MLB trade deadline burning questions
Will Tigers, Red Sox streaks change selling landscape?
Ask around in early June, and it was a forgone conclusion Tarik Skubal would be wearing a different jersey come August. But the Tigers are 21-12 in June and July and – by virtue of a brutally bad AL and an AL Central that continues to hover just below mediocre as a whole – are back in the playoff race. Similarly, the Red Sox entered the break scorching hot on a nine-game win streak, and could well be in the race as well. If Skubal, Casey Mize, Chapman, and Gray are off the table as trade options, the deadline is shaping up to be completely different.
Who will swing to catch the Dodgers?
As the AL continues to shuffle onward this season, one team in the NL lords over MLB: The dreaded Dodgers. While it would be folly to think the Dodgers will sit on their heels at the deadline, it's clear someone in the NL has to take a big swing to try to unseat the two-time defending MLB champs. The NL East has three teams mired in a hot race, while the Brewers may be best positioned to try to unseat L.A. Milwaukee added Lance McCullers Jr. to its pitching staff, but may need to go out and get a bat to try and compete with baseball's current Death Star.
How aggressive will the Yankees be?
In the AL East, it's reasonable to assume the Rays will continue to live on the margins and try to add role players who can contribute to their order, particularly after seemingly surviving an All-Star Game scare to star slugger Junior Caminero. As the Yankees chase them in the AL East, things seem to be slipping for the Bronx Bombers. They went 12-14 in June and are 6-5 in July. The good news? The Yankees aren't getting decimated by right or left-handed pitching, their splits are pretty even. They're reportedly chasing either Jeffers or Hunter Goodman, though the latter would be difficult to pry away from Colorado. Reliever help is also a question, with the Yankees reportedly inquiring on fireballer Mason Miller.
Will the Mets go into firesale mode?
In Queens, this season has been an unmitigated disaster. The Mets are 17 games below .500 and 16 games out of the NL East lead. The only untouchable player on that roster should, of course, be Juan Soto. The bullpen would likely garner the most interest, particularly Luke Weaver, but catcher Francisco Alvarez is also a question mark. Brooks Raley and AJ Minter likely already have their lockers packed as well.
Are the Angels serious about holding onto their players?
What the hell are the Angels going to do? GM Perry Minasian was fired after saying he was going to hold on to key Angels pieces, but with him out the door, it stands to reason Reid Detmers and Jo Adell are available. Mike Trout's no-trade clause waiver discourse is an annual tradition at this point, but until there's any indication of that happening, it's just noise.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB trade deadline 2026: Top trade candidates, possible buyers and sellers