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    Home ASIA-PACIFIC Papua New Guinea

    Same salary cap, different outcome

    The Analyst by The Analyst
    June 23, 2026
    in Papua New Guinea


    COMMENTARY

    WHEN the PNG Chiefs enter the NRL competition in 2028, they will do so with a recruitment advantage no other club currently enjoys.

    It is not a bigger salary cap. It is not extra marquee player allowances. And it is not unlimited spending power. The real weapon could be something much simpler — tax-free income.

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    Since the PNG Government confirmed that players, coaches and club officials associated with the PNG Chiefs will receive tax-free salaries and benefits, rugby league fans across Australia and Papua New Guinea have been trying to understand what this could mean for the club’s ability to attract talent.

    The answer could be significant.

    Same salary cap, different outcome

    Despite widespread speculation, the Chiefs will still be required to operate under the same NRL salary cap rules as every other club.

    Based on current projections, the NRL salary cap is expected to be around K31.46 million (approximately A$12.1 million) for a club’s Top 30 roster by 2027. That means the Chiefs cannot simply spend more money than rival clubs.

    However, where the difference emerges is in what players actually take home at the end of the year.

    At most NRL clubs, a substantial portion of a player’s salary is lost through income tax.

    Under the Chiefs model, players are expected to retain the full value of their contracted earnings.

    That changes the conversation entirely.

    A player comparing two contracts of equal value may discover that a deal in Papua New Guinea leaves far more money in their pocket than the same contract elsewhere.

    For professional athletes whose careers can be relatively short, that financial advantage could become a major factor when deciding where to play.

    Why the Chiefs could attract elite talent

    Every NRL club operates on a tiered salary structure. Not all players earn the same amount. Representative stars, State of Origin players and international performers command the highest salaries because they bring leadership, experience, commercial appeal and match-winning ability.

    The Chiefs have already demonstrated their ambition with the signing of marquee playmaker Jarome Luai.

    Reports suggest Luai’s deal is worth around K3.12 million per season (approximately A$1.2 million).

    Under a tax-free arrangement, that entire amount could remain in the player’s hands.

    For comparison, a similar contract elsewhere in the NRL would normally be reduced significantly after taxation.

    That difference alone could make PNG one of the most attractive destinations in world rugby league.

    What players could earn

    While official annual salary figures have not been released, industry estimates suggest the Chiefs’ roster could be structured along these lines:

    Elite marquee players – K3.12 million to K3.9 million; Senior representative rlayers – K1.56m  to K2.34m; Established NRL first-graders – K780,000 to K1.3m; Squad players – K468,000 to K780,000 per year;  Development players – K312,000 to K468,000.

    These figures are estimates only, but they provide a realistic picture of what the market could look like when the club enters the competition.

    Importantly, the tax-free benefit could make even mid-range contracts far more valuable than equivalent deals at rival clubs.

    It’s not just about the players

    The tax-free incentive extends beyond the playing group. Coaches, football managers, recruitment staff, performance specialists and club administrators connected to the Chiefs will also benefit.

    This could help the franchise compete for some of the best rugby league minds in Australia, New Zealand and overseas. Recruiting elite coaches and administrators is often just as important as signing star players.

    Building a successful NRL club requires strong leadership behind the scenes, and the Chiefs now have a powerful incentive to attract experienced professionals.

    A game-changer for PNG rugby league

    The bigger picture goes beyond contracts and pay packets. For decades, Papua New Guinea has produced talented rugby league players who have dreamed of playing at the highest level.

    The arrival of the Chiefs creates a pathway for local players to remain connected to home while competing in the world’s premier rugby league competition.

    At the same time, the tax-free model could encourage overseas-based PNG stars and elite international players to seriously consider relocating to Port Moresby.

    If managed correctly, the Chiefs may become one of the most attractive clubs in the NRL without spending a single kina more than their rivals under the salary cap.

    Real question

    The debate is no longer whether the Chiefs can compete financially with established NRL clubs. The real question is how rival clubs will respond. Because while every team will continue to work within the same salary cap, the Chiefs offer something nobody else currently can the opportunity for players and officials to keep more of what they earn.

    In a professional sport where recruitment battles are often decided by small margins, that advantage could prove to be one of the most powerful tools in the modern NRL era.

    Note: All kina figures are estimates based on an exchange rate of A$1 = K2.60. Actual earnings will depend on final contract terms, exchange rates, taxation arrangements and NRL regulations in place when the PNG Chiefs enter the competition in 2028.



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