Jauan Jennings is officially off the market.
Jennings was one of the top free agents remaining after the NFL draft, and has now agreed to terms with the Vikings, the team announced Thursday night. Per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Jennings has agreed to a one-year deal that includes a base salary of $8 million and is worth up to $13 million.
The 28-year-old joins the Vikings after spending the first six seasons of his career with the 49ers. This past season, Jennings caught 55 passes for 643 yards and nine touchdowns in 15 games. Overall in San Francisco, the former seventh-round pick compiled 210 receptions for 2,581 yards and 22 touchdowns, including a career-high 975 receiving yards in 2024.
Jennings now heads to his second team in the Vikings. Here is why Minnesota was the perfect destination for the veteran wideout.
Why the Vikings were the perfect landing spot for Jauan Jennings
For both the Vikings and Jennings, this move made so much sense. On the Vikings’ end, they were in need of a No. 3 receiver after Jalen Nailor departed for the Raiders. They have exactly that in Jennings, who was frequently the No. 3 or No. 4 option in a 49ers offense featuring Christian McCaffrey, George Kittle, Brandon Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel and others during his time there. Jennings is capable of stepping up to a larger role—which he regularly did for a 49ers team plagued by injuries.
With Nailor’s departure, the Vikings’ receiving room was thin and inexperienced behind stars Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison. Now, they have a target that will make it tough for defenses looking to slow down Jefferson and Addison.
Jennings is a seamless fit for the Vikings’ offense under Kevin O’Connell. Playing under Kyle Shanahan, Jennings was a great target in both the underneath and intermediate areas of the field, the latter of which O’Connell likes taking advantage of. His ability to pick up yards after the catch will only help the Vikings offense gain first downs and take advantage of the open spaces in the middle of the field.
Not only does Jennings replace Nailor as the team’s No. 3 wideout on an every down basis, he can certainly replicate the production Nailor had on third down. Nailor finished second on the Vikings in 2025 in third down receiving yards with 170, only trailing Justin Jefferson. Jennings, who affectionally became known as “third and Jauan” over his time with the 49ers, ranked top-20 in the league in 2025 in third-down receiving, with 22 receptions for 290 yards and five touchdowns on the all-important down.
Jennings is a great run blocker, which will help the Vikings as they look to improve an offense that ranked 23rd in rushing yards per game in 2025. The Vikings’ receivers are not known for their abilities as run blockers, an element Jennings can bring to the offense. He is tough, both willing to shed through blockers and playing through multiple broken ribs last season. As a bonus, the former four-star quarterback can also throw the ball and execute a trick play as need be—which he did to spectacular effect in the 49ers’ wild-card win over the Eagles last January.
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EVA GEITHEIM
Eva Geitheim is an NFL writer at Sports Illustrated. Prior to joining SI in December 2024, she wrote for Newsweek, Gymnastics Now and Dodgers Nation. A Bay Area native, she has a bachelor’s in communications from UCLA. When not writing, she can be found baking or rewatching Gilmore Girls.
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