Travel Baseball Can Cost You More Than Money (An MLB Agent Explains)

Travel baseball can cost you tens of thousands of dollars, and the real bill is bigger than the checks you are writing. Here is what you are actually paying for. MLB agent Matt Hannaford adds up the real cost of travel baseball so you can stop overpaying and start spending on what actually develops your son. Subscribe for the insider playbook on recruiting, the transfer portal, and the MLB Draft. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN The full cost of travel baseball that most families never add up Why spending more does not mean your son is developing more When a roster spot you are paying for is no longer worth it The cost that has nothing to do with money: your relationship with your son How to capture the benefit of travel baseball at the lowest possible cost Matt Hannaford answers three real questions from travel baseball parents, and every one of them comes back to cost. First, the obvious bill: entry fees, program dues, flights, rental cars, hotels, and food. Matt is direct that travel baseball is a completely different animal than Little League, and that the financial buy-in is real before you talk about anything else. Then comes the cost most families never see coming. Parents spend all of this money chasing exposure early, and end up in the hole 20, 40, sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars, only to reach 16 and wonder why their son still is not being recruited. Matt explains the order that protects your wallet: development first, then competition, then exposure, because August 1 of junior year is the first time a Division I program can even contact you. You can go to almost no events, focus on development, and your son is still not behind. He points to Steph Curry, who developed his game and went to Davidson, and Evan Longoria, who went from junior college to Long Beach State to the third overall pick. When Jim from Naperville asks whether he is just paying $3,000 to develop the starters, Matt gives you the two questions to ask a coach before you write the check, and the respectful meeting to have when the program stops adding value. And the deepest cost is not money at all. When Tom from Louisville asks whether travel ball is development or status, Matt gets honest about the ranking system and the value of failure, citing the start to Austin Riley's career. Former big leaguer Danny Espinosa shares what a real win looks like: your son saying, it's okay, I love you. Related topics include college recruiting, scholarships, the transfer portal, NIL, and rec ball versus travel ball. TIMESTAMPS 0:00 - The Real Cost of Travel Baseball 1:40 - The Costs Nobody Adds Up 4:41 - The Benefit at the Lowest Cost 16:25 - Spending Big and Still Not Recruited 22:06 - Paying $3,000 to Sit the Bench 28:47 - The Cost That Isn't Money 31:26 - Why Rankings Cost You Focus ABOUT THE MVA PODCAST Matt Hannaford is an MLB agent who gives you the insider playbook on college recruiting, the transfer portal, and MLB Draft decisions. The Most Valuable Agent Podcast helps parents and players navigate the system with confidence. Have a question for a future episode? Email [email protected] Subscribe:    / @mostvaluableagent   MVA Website: https://www.aligndsports.com/ Instagram:   / mfhannaford   #MVAPodcast #TravelBaseball #CollegeBaseball #MLBDraft #YouthSports