2024 Top 100 Prospects
Last Updated: Sept. 11.
The Baseball America Top 100 Prospects rankings are our 35th edition of our flagship prospect ranking, which means the players included below are part of a fraternity of the best prospects in baseball that stretches from 1990 (which included Hall of Famer Frank Thomas) through the 2000s (where 2004-2005 No. 1 prospect Joe Mauer just became a Hall of Famer as well) and now into the 2020s, where No. 1 prospects like Adley Rutschman and Gunnar Henderson have become stars.
To report the list, we have discussions with MLB scouts, coaches, analysts and front office officials. We also see players in person and utilize as much data as we can get our hands on. It also relies on all the reporting we did to produce our Top 30 Prospects rankings online as well as the Baseball America Prospect Handbook.
Players are eligible if they have not exceeded 130 MLB at-bats, 50 innings pitched or 30 pitching appearances. Service time does not play a role in whether players are eligible for this ranking.
Our September update marks our last significant update of the 2024 season. We have taken nearly six weeks worth of intel, data and evaluations into consideration to make substantial changes to the list that will carry us into the offseason. If you want to get more information about why players moved up or down from previous updates, you can track the movement here.
Players in the Top 100 Prospects list are ranked for their long-term MLB impact, with allowances for the risk that they will fall short of that ceiling. The tools grades listed for each player are all future grades of what we project them to be in the best stretch of their big league careers.
Additional Top 100 Content
- 15 players who just missed the preseason list
- Who could be the No. 1 prospect in 2025?
- Top 30 prospects in every MLB season
- Track the Top 100 in-season movement here