Avoiding arbitration in baseball means a team and a player reach a contract agreement before an arbitration hearing is held, so a panel never has to decide the player’s salary for that season.

What arbitration is in MLB

  • After about three years of MLB service time, many players become arbitration -eligible instead of being paid at the team’s unilateral choice or via full free agency.
  • If team and player cannot agree on salary, each submits a number and a panel of arbitrators chooses one of the two figures for a one‑year contract.

What “avoid arbitration” actually means

  • “Avoiding arbitration” is simply baseball shorthand for the player and club agreeing to a deal before the scheduled arbitration hearing takes place.
  • The agreement can be a one‑year contract that replaces the hearing or a multi‑year deal that covers all remaining arbitration‑eligible years (and sometimes one or more free‑agent years).

Why both sides want to avoid it

  • Hearings are described as cutthroat : the team argues why the player is worth less, and the player argues why they are worth more, which can strain relationships.
  • Because the arbitrators must pick one side’s number with no middle ground, both sides risk losing control over cost and salary, so many cases settle beforehand.

In plain language

  • Think of it like settling a lawsuit before trial: avoiding arbitration means agreeing on a number privately instead of letting a third party publicly pick a winner and a loser.
  • So when you see “Team X avoids arbitration with Player Y,” it just means they struck a negotiated contract and won’t go through the formal, adversarial arbitration process.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.