Change is arriving quickly at Levi’s Stadium.
After a 2025 season that exposed structural issues up front – particularly in run blocking and protection consistency – the San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch has begun making difficult, forward-looking decisions as the organization recalibrates around cap flexibility and long-term protection for Brock Purdy.
According to league sources, one of the roster’s highest-paid veterans has now been informed that the team plans to move on.
That player is Trent Williams.

Williams, the 49ers’ starting left tackle and future Hall of Famer, carries a 2026 cap hit of approximately $38.8 million, including a $22.2 million base salary, $10 million signing bonus proration, and workout incentives. From a financial standpoint, the move is hard to overlook: a trade or release would free roughly $25-30 million in cap space, with a manageable dead cap of about $10-15 million.
The decision follows ongoing discussions about age-related concerns (Williams turns 38 in 2026) and the massive cap number approaching, even as he remains one of the league’s elite tackles. Multiple league outlets, including ESPN, Niners Nation, OverTheCap, and NFLTradeRumors, have highlighted Williams as a prime candidate for restructure, retirement talk (which he shut down), or potential trade to create flexibility.
Internally, the 49ers believe the timing could be right to reset the offensive line. Younger, more cost-controlled options – such as Colton McKivitz at RT or draft prospects – are viewed as viable paths forward as the team looks to build around Purdy without carrying a premium veteran contract that could limit extensions for core players like Fred Warner or George Kittle.
Sources indicate that Williams’ representatives are now actively exploring next team options, with trade discussions potentially accelerating as contenders assess veteran tackle depth across the league.
For San Francisco, the move is less about what Williams has represented (a dominant force since the 2020 trade from Washington) and more about what the roster needs to become. Clearing significant cap space without absorbing crippling dead money gives the 49ers flexibility to retool, reinforce the trenches, and extend their competitive window in a loaded NFC.
In the early days of the offseason, Lynch has made one thing clear: no contract is immune when long-term contention is the priority.