Alex Bregman Profile Summary & Quick Facts
| Full Name | Alexander David Bregman |
| Date of Birth | March 30, 1994 |
| Place of Birth | Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA |
| Height | 6 ft 0 in (183 cm) |
| Weight | 192 lbs (87 kg) |
| Position | Third Baseman (3B) |
| Current Team | Chicago Cubs (since January 2026) |
| MLB Debut | July 25, 2016 |
| Draft | 2015 — 2nd Overall Pick, Houston Astros |
| College | Louisiana State University (LSU) |
| Career Batting Average | .272 |
| Career Home Runs | 214+ |
| World Series Rings | 2 (2017, 2022) |
| Gold Glove Awards | 1 (2024) |
| Net Worth (2026) | Estimated $40-$50 million |
| Wife | Reagan Bregman (nee Howard) |
| Children | 2 sons: Knox Samuel (2022), second son (April 2025) |
| Religion | Jewish |
Alex Bregman Net Worth 2026: How He Built His Wealth
When the Cubs signing broke in January, a buddy texted me one question: “Where does a guy even put $175 million?” He wasn’t wrong to ask. People hear that number and assume Bregman’s been loaded since his rookie year. He wasn’t.
Alex Bregman’s net worth in 2026 is somewhere between $40 million and $50 million. That’s the realistic number after a decade in the league, not the inflated guess you’ll see floating around. The reason it’s not higher is pretty simple — real money came late. His first six years were rookie-scale and pre-arbitration contracts, which pay a fraction of what established veterans earn.
The first big check came in 2019: a 6-year, $100 million extension with the Houston Astros running through 2024. Then in early 2025, he signed a 3-year, $120 million deal with the Boston Red Sox that had opt-outs built in. He used one after a strong enough season to go looking for something bigger and longer.
He found it on January 14, 2026. Five years, $175 million with the Chicago Cubs. About $70 million of that is deferred, paid between 2034 and 2041 according to Spotrac. Athletes defer salary for tax reasons all the time — the money is still fully guaranteed, just spread over a longer window.
Outside of baseball, he has endorsement deals with Adidas, Rawlings, Easton, Marucci, H-E-B, and Oura Ring. The Oura Ring deal tells you something. That’s a sleep and recovery tech brand, not a sporting goods company. He’s deliberately attaching himself to things outside baseball, which is a smart move for an athlete heading into his 30s.
He also owns Breggy Bomb Salsa, runs Bregman Family Racing (racehorses he and Reagan bought in 2022), and took a 2026 stake in Immortal, a health and recovery tech company. None of these are huge earners right now. But they add up, and they diversify away from his playing income.
Once the Cubs contract fully pays out through the 2030s, that $40-50 million figure looks very different.
Early Life, Family Background & Jewish Heritage

Albuquerque, New Mexico doesn’t produce many MLB players. But the Bregman family was already wired into professional sports long before Alex threw his first pitch.
His parents, Sam and Jackie Bregman, are both lawyers who met in law school. Sam went on to serve as District Attorney of Bernalillo County and chaired the Democratic Party of New Mexico. Jackie converted from Catholicism to Judaism before they married. Jewish identity was central to how Alex grew up — this wasn’t just background noise, it came up in how he talked about himself and his career, publicly.
At his Bar Mitzvah at Congregation Albert in Albuquerque, 13-year-old Alex told the room he wanted to be a professional athlete, play for the love of the game, never quit, and be a role model for kids who looked up to baseball players. His family talks about it to this day. He meant every word.
The baseball history in this family goes back further than most people know. His grandfather, Stan Bregman, was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants and worked as general counsel for the Washington Senators in the late 1960s. Stan helped pull off the team’s move to Texas in 1971 and had a hand in signing Hall of Famer Ted Williams as manager. Alex wasn’t the first person in his family to leave a mark on a franchise.
Go back one more generation: Samuel “Bo” Bregman fled anti-Jewish pogroms in Russia around 1900, ended up in Washington D.C., and later joined the ownership group that relocated the Boston Redskins there. More than a century of American sports history runs through this family tree.
Alex has a younger brother, A.J. Bregman, who was drafted by the Astros in the 35th round of the 2018 MLB Draft. Their father played college baseball at the University of New Mexico on scholarship. So did their great-uncle Ben. Baseball wasn’t pushed on Alex — it was just already the common language in that house.
High School to LSU: Rise of a Baseball Prodigy
Most baseball bios treat the hand injury in Bregman’s senior year as a footnote. It shouldn’t be. It’s the reason he went to LSU, and LSU is the reason he went second overall.
He went to Albuquerque Academy. As a freshman in 2009 — 14 years old — he hit .514 with three home runs, including one that left the yard at Isotopes Park, a Triple-A stadium, during the state championship. Playing against kids three years older, on a professional field.
Sophomore year, he was on the USA 16-and-under National Team at the COPABE Pan American Baseball Championships in Mexico. He hit .564 and was named MVP. Same year, he became the first high school player ever to win the USA Baseball Dick Case Player of the Year Award. He was 16 years old.
Junior year was even more absurd: .678 average, 19 home runs, a New Mexico state record. First-round talk everywhere.
Then five games into senior year, a bad-hop ground ball, a bare-hand attempt, and a shattered knuckle. He missed most of the season. Teams got cold feet. The Red Sox took him in round 29 of the 2012 draft — round 29. He passed. Said he’d only sign if a team took him in the first round, otherwise he was going to college. He enrolled at LSU.
Three years at LSU: two-time All-American, won the 2013 Brooks Wallace Award as the country’s best college shortstop, took the Tigers to the College World Series. The 2015 MLB Draft: second overall pick, Houston Astros, $5.9 million signing bonus.
The broken knuckle didn’t end his career. It pushed him to LSU, which pushed him up draft boards. Round 29 to second overall in three years.
MLB Career Highlights: Astros, Red Sox & Cubs
Bregman debuted on July 25, 2016 against the Yankees and went 0-for-17 to start. The Astros moved him up the batting order so he’d see better pitches. First hit came July 31 against Detroit. First home run August 16 against St. Louis. Per Baseball Reference, he played 49 games that first year, hit .264 with 8 home runs. Nothing flashy. The foundation held.
2017: Youngest player on Team USA at the World Baseball Classic, which won gold over Puerto Rico 8-0. Finished the year with a World Series ring. His walk-off single in Game 5 of the World Series won it 13-12 in ten innings.
2018: Named MVP of the MLB All-Star Game after a go-ahead homer in the 10th inning. First primary third baseman in MLB history with 50 doubles and 30 home runs in the same season.
2019: His best year by most measures. Led the majors in walks (119) and WAR (8.4). Finished second in AL MVP voting behind Mike Trout — those two were first and second on every single ballot. Won the Silver Slugger Award. His .296/.423/.592 slash line holds up as one of the best third-base seasons of that entire decade.
2022: Second World Series ring with Houston, this time over the Phillies in six games. He played the final with a broken finger.
2024: Won his first Gold Glove at third base, leading all AL third basemen in assists, putouts, and fielding percentage. It took a while to get that recognition. The numbers had been there for years before voters caught up.
2025: Went to Boston. Per ESPN, hit .273 with 18 home runs and 62 RBIs across 114 games before a quad injury shut him down. Enough to trigger the opt-out.
Per MLB.com, he has appeared in the postseason every full season he has played. In 102 career postseason games, no third baseman in MLB history has more hits, home runs, RBIs, putouts, or assists. That kind of record doesn’t happen by accident.
Chicago Cubs Contract 2026: Full $175M Deal Breakdown
Jed Hoyer had been trying to sign this guy for two winters straight. The previous offseason, Chicago put a four-year, $120 million offer on the table with opt-outs. Bregman turned it down because Boston was paying more per year. This time, Hoyer came back at $35 million annually — the biggest average annual salary in Cubs franchise history — plus a full no-trade clause. That got it done.
The deal was agreed January 11, 2026 and officially announced three days later. Five years, $175 million total, with $70 million deferred to 2034-2041 per Spotrac. Per MLB.com’s announcement, the deferral structure keeps Chicago just below the first Competitive Balance Tax threshold in 2026. Bregman gets every dollar — just not all at once.
The day after signing, he confirmed he’d play for Team USA at the 2026 World Baseball Classic. Cubs fans barely had time to celebrate before he was already committed to international baseball.
Chicago hasn’t won a World Series since 2016 and lost to Milwaukee in last year’s NLDS. Adding a two-time champion with a Gold Glove and a career .365 on-base percentage to the middle of their lineup is exactly what Hoyer was building toward.
Through 64 games of 2026, his numbers haven’t matched what the Cubs were expecting. Management keeps saying publicly they’re patient. A five-year commitment gives them room to be. The real evaluation of this deal comes later.
Wife Reagan Bregman: Love Story, Wedding & Family Life
Reagan Bregman is not a celebrity spouse who stays in the background. She ran a long-distance relationship while working full-time at two major tech companies, launched her own business, and planned a pandemic wedding. Worth knowing who she is.
Born August 26, 1994, in Louisiana. Her father worked in offshore oil and gas, which meant the family moved — Trinidad and Tobago, Spain, Canada — before settling in Katy, Texas, west of Houston.
She graduated from Texas A&M in 2017 with a marketing degree. At A&M she was president of the Panama Global Business Brigades, organizing student work trips for small businesses in Panama. After graduation she took sales jobs at Oracle and Google in Austin.
She and Alex met through mutual friends at a group dinner in Houston on a weekend Reagan almost skipped. A few days later, first date. The early months meant a lot of highway time — she drove three hours each way between Austin and Houston on weekends, then up at 5am Monday mornings to be back for work. Eventually she moved to Houston. Alex proposed in Aspen in January 2020.
The wedding was supposed to happen in December 2020 at a San Antonio resort. COVID changed that. They got married at Reagan’s parents’ house in Katy on December 5, 2020 with a small group, partly because Alex’s father was high-risk. Reagan later told The Knot it ended up being a better day because of it.
Their son Knox Samuel was born August 1, 2022. Alex missed a game to be at the hospital. Seven weeks later Knox was at Minute Maid Park. A few months after that, he was on the field when Houston won the World Series. Their second son arrived April 17, 2025.
In 2021, Reagan started Exiza, a Houston-based athleisure brand built around ethical manufacturing. Her company, her idea. The family dog is a Golden Retriever named Hank. Growing up, Alex had two dogs: Jeter (Derek Jeter) and Koufax (Sandy Koufax, one of baseball’s most celebrated Jewish pitchers).
Endorsements, Business Ventures & Investments
His endorsement list is longer and more varied than most baseball players his age. Equipment side: Rawlings, Easton, and Marucci cover his gear, Adidas covers footwear and clothing. But the more interesting deals are outside baseball.
Oura Ring is a sleep and recovery wearable — not a sports equipment brand. That deal positions him as a health-focused athlete rather than just a baseball player. H-E-B, the Texas grocery chain with something close to a regional cult following, has him as a local face. Both of those say something intentional about how he’s managed his public image over the years.
Breggy Bomb Salsa came first on the business side — food brand built off his home run nickname, promoted through the Salsa Fuego YouTube series through PHW Productions. Then Bregman Family Racing in 2022, buying racehorses with Reagan as investment assets. Not a common move for an active player in his late 20s. It’s the kind of portfolio decision that comes from financial advisors who push diversification.
Most recently, a 2026 stake in Immortal, a health and recovery tech company that several other pro athletes have also invested in. At 32, entering the back half of his playing career, the alignment makes sense. He’s not just endorsing these products — he owns a piece of the category.
More on how athletes build income outside their playing contracts: Ryan Gosling’s career earnings and investments.
Charity Work: Bregman Cares Foundation & Community Impact

Most charity coverage around athletes is surface level. Bregman Cares has a specific origin story that matters, so it’s worth telling properly.
His hitting coach and one of his closest friends is Jason Columbus. Jason’s son Brady is autistic and was largely nonverbal for years. The family started using iPad-based communication apps and Brady’s world changed. Bregman saw it happen. He didn’t form a foundation for PR reasons — he wanted other families who couldn’t afford those same tools to have access to them. That’s the whole origin.
Per bregmancares.org, the foundation has put more than 200 iPads into autism-specific classrooms and provided over $11,000 worth of Proloquo2Go communication software — the exact app that helped Brady — to schools in the Houston area. His stated goal is to build the leading autism resource for kids in Houston, eventually opening a dedicated school modeled on LeBron James’ I Promise School in Akron.
During COVID, he organized the #FEEDHOU campaign and partnered with the Houston Food Bank to deliver $2 million worth of meals to kids who lost access to school lunches. He also donated 1,000 quarantine food kits personally. Those numbers come from the foundation itself, confirmed by MLB.com’s coverage.
In the 2021 Texas winter storm that knocked out power for days, he and Reagan ran water distribution at the Astros Youth Academy alongside Brothers Produce. That year the Houston chapter of the Baseball Writers gave him the Darryl Kile Good Guy Award — voted on by beat reporters who cover the team every single day, not selected by committee.
As Sports Illustrated reported, Reagan runs Bregman Cares alongside him. This is a joint operation, not a name-only situation. For more on athletes using their platform for community work, see Derek Dixon’s profile.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Alex Bregman’s net worth in 2026?
Estimates put his net worth at $40 to $50 million. That number comes from his MLB earnings history, the new $175 million Cubs contract, endorsement income from brands like Adidas and Oura Ring, and business stakes in Bregman Family Racing and Immortal.
Who is Alex Bregman’s wife?
Reagan Bregman, born Reagan Howard, graduated from Texas A&M with a marketing degree in 2017. She worked in sales at Oracle and Google before launching her own athleisure brand, Exiza, in 2021. They got married in Katy, Texas on December 5, 2020.
How many kids does Alex Bregman have?
Two sons. Knox Samuel Bregman was born August 1, 2022. His second son arrived April 17, 2025.
What team does Alex Bregman play for in 2026?
The Chicago Cubs. He signed a five-year, $175 million deal on January 14, 2026, after opting out of his contract with Boston.
Is Alex Bregman Jewish?
Yes. He was raised Jewish, had his Bar Mitzvah at Congregation Albert in Albuquerque, and his family’s Jewish heritage goes back to his great-grandfather Samuel Bregman, who fled Russian anti-Jewish pogroms around 1900.
Has Alex Bregman won a Gold Glove? He won his first Gold Glove Award at third base in 2024, finishing that season as the top AL third baseman in assists, putouts, and fielding percentage.
How many World Series rings does Alex Bregman have?
Two. Both with the Houston Astros, in 2017 and 2022.
What is the Bregman Cares Foundation?
A nonprofit focused on autism awareness that started because of Alex’s connection to Brady Columbus, his hitting coach’s son. It has donated 200+ iPads and over $11,000 in communication software to schools, and raised $2 million for the Houston Food Bank during COVID through the #FEEDHOU campaign.
Why did Bregman leave the Red Sox?
He had an opt-out clause and used it after the 2025 season. The Cubs offered five years at $35 million per year — more total money and more guaranteed years than Boston was willing to offer.
What are Alex Bregman’s endorsements?
Adidas, Rawlings, Easton, Marucci, Oura Ring, H-E-B, and eBay. He also owns Breggy Bomb Salsa and holds an investment stake in Immortal, a health and recovery tech company he joined in 2026.
Sources & References
Every stat, contract figure, and biographical detail in this article comes from a named primary source. Nothing here is estimated without disclosure.
Official MLB & Career Statistics
Alex Bregman — MLB.com Official Player Profile — Official stats, awards, and team history from Major League Baseball.
Alex Bregman — Baseball-Reference.com — Year-by-year batting, fielding, WAR, and postseason records.
Alex Bregman Career Stats — ESPN — Batting and advanced metrics across all MLB seasons.
Alex Bregman — FanGraphs — Advanced metrics including WAR, wRC+, and sprint speed.
Contract & Salary Data
Alex Bregman Contract Details — Spotrac — Full $175M Cubs contract structure with deferred payment schedule and AAV.
Cubs Sign Bregman — MLB.com Official Announcement — Official announcement with contract terms, deferral structure, and no-trade clause.
Alex Bregman Agrees to 5-Year $175M Deal — ESPN — Original breaking news by Jeff Passan, January 2026.
Biography & Background
Alex Bregman — Wikipedia — Full biography covering early life, LSU career, MLB debut, and personal life.
Alex Bregman — Jewish Virtual Library — Jewish heritage and family history across multiple generations.
Charity & Foundation
Bregman Cares — Official Foundation Website — Foundation impact numbers: iPads, software donations, campaign totals.
Alex Bregman’s Autism Awareness Work — MLB.com — MLB feature on the AB for Autism campaign and Brady Columbus’s story.
Alex & Reagan Bregman: Philanthropic Efforts — Sports Illustrated — Profile of Bregman Cares and Reagan’s role in running the foundation.
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