With hours left before Tuesday’s 4 p.m. ET deadline, Breece Hall’s status remains one of the New York Jets’ most-watched storylines. Multiple teams have checked in on running back help, but New York has publicly cooled speculation while gauging real offers against roster needs and contract math.
Hall is producing at a high clip in 2025 and sits on the final non‑void year of his rookie deal, which complicates timing but enhances his appeal.
What Is The Latest On Breece Hall’s Trade Situation?
USA TODAY reports “multiple NFL teams remain interested in Hall despite Jets coach Aaron Glenn shooting down trade speculation,” with a source close to the situation adding, “It could go either way,” emphasizing the uncertainty in the final window. Hall’s 2025 line through eight games: 117 carries, 581 rushing yards (5.0 YPC), two rushing TDs; plus 21 receptions for 178 yards, per ESPN’s game log.
I mean surely Breece Hall is on the move after that Sauce trade right?
— SleeperNFL (@SleeperNFL) November 4, 2025
New York is 1-7, and interest from buyers reflects Hall’s efficiency and age, but the Jets have publicly signaled reluctance to move core pieces unless “blown away.” The team context includes running back depth considerations with Braelon Allen on injured reserve, which could further temper willingness to deal in‑season.
As of early afternoon Nov. 4, there is no announced trade, and Hall remains active on the Jets’ depth chart ahead of Week 10 after the London slate. The market watch continues, but internal messaging points to keeping Hall unless valuation and timing align.
#UPDATE: After the Jets traded away Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams, insider Connor Hughes reported that the franchise is fielding offers for Hall and Jermaine Johnson.
“Two names to watch: Jermaine Johnson and Breece Hall. There are offers from teams on the table for both,” Hughes wrote on X. “Just a matter of if the Jets accept them. Considering the deals for Quinnen Williams & Sauce, have to like chances of that happening.”
NFL insider Tom Pelissero, however, said that the Jets are not willing to trade Hall. “On a wild day in Florham Park, the Jets are not expected to trade Breece Hall, though there is still over an hour to the deadline,” he wrote on X.
NFL insider Dianna Russini then shared another update on Hall’s future. “The Jets’ asking price for Breece Hall is a third-round pick, per source,” Russini wrote on X. “Teams have yet to meet New York’s ask with just over an hour to go until the deadline.”
#UPDATE 2: With just over an hour left for the NFL trade deadline, Hall has informed the Jets that he wants to be traded.
“BREAKING: Jets RB Breece Hall wants to be traded, I’m told,” wrote NFL insider Jordan Schultz on X. “A little over one hour until the deadline, but Breece “wants to be out.”
Breece Hall Trade Return For Jets
Reporting around price has narrowed the likely range. Other outlets note that the Jets “would take a third‑round pick” to trade Hall today, consistent with prior asks; some reports project that the actual return could be lower, potentially a fifth, based on recent running back trades, which strengthens the case that New York holds if only mid‑round offers materialize.
Hall’s rookie deal (4 years, $9,014,768; $7,080,482 fully guaranteed) runs through 2025 with unrestricted free agency in 2026; his 2025 cap charge is listed at $4,340,049. Over The Cap values his 2025 OTC valuation at $8.676M, underscoring surplus performance vs. APY and why a third‑round threshold is plausible from the Jets’ standpoint.
Extension chatter is also relevant while addressing a potential trade. Hall’s next contract could reportedly land closer to $8-9M per year, which is lower than previous assumptions, making retention more attractive than a day‑three return. So, unless a buyer meets or beats New York’s ask (third‑round range), indicators point to Hall staying, with tag/extension avenues and in‑season utility outweighing a discounted trade.

