2024 Los Angeles Dodgers season

The 2024 Los Angeles Dodgers season is the 135th season for the Los Angeles Dodgers franchise in Major League Baseball (MLB), their 67th season in Los Angeles, California, and their 62nd season playing their home games at Dodger Stadium. They enter the season as the defending National League West champions.

Roster departures
On October 19, pitcher Wander Suero was outrighted to the minors and elected to become a free agent. On October 31, pitcher Tyler Cyr was also outrighted to the minors. On November 2, one day after the conclusion of the 2023 World Series, 12 Dodger players became free agents: Pitchers Clayton Kershaw, Jimmy Nelson, Ryan Brasier, Shelby Miller, and Julio Urías, outfielders Jason Heyward, Jake Marisnick and David Peralta, infielders Amed Rosario and Kolten Wong, designated hitter J. D. Martinez and utility player Kiké Hernández. The Dodgers declined the 2024 options on pitchers Lance Lynn, Alex Reyes, Joe Kelly and Daniel Hudson making them all free agents.

On December 11, the Dodgers traded pitcher Victor González and infielder Jorbit Vivas to the New York Yankees for minor league infielder Trey Sweeney. Pitcher Bryan Hudson was designated for assignment on December 27 and removed from the roster. On January 11, the Dodgers traded infielder Michael Busch and relief pitcher Yency Almonte to the Chicago Cubs in exchange for two minor league players, Jackson Ferris and Zyhir Hope. On February 5, the Dodgers traded pitcher Caleb Ferguson to the New York Yankees in exchange for pitcher Matt Gage and minor leaguer Christian Zazueta.

Roster additions
On November 14, the Dodgers added minor league pitchers Nick Frasso and Landon Knack and catcher Hunter Feduccia to the 40-man roster to protect them from the Rule 5 Draft. On November 16, they re-signed pitcher Ricky Vanasco, who had been with the team in the minors the previous season, to a one-year contract. On December 6, the Dodgers re-signed outfielder Jason Heyward to a one-year contract. On December 11, the Dodgers re-signed pitcher Joe Kelly to a one-year, $8 million, contract. Later that day, they signed pitcher/designated hitter Shohei Ohtani to a 10-year, $700 million contract. On December 16, the Dodgers traded pitcher Ryan Pepiot and outfielder Jonny DeLuca to the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for pitcher Tyler Glasnow (who signed a five-year, $135 million extension) and outfielder Manuel Margot. On December 27, Pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto signed a twelve-year, $325 million contract with the team. The Dodgers also had to pay a $51 million posting fee to Yamamoto's Japanese team, the Orix Buffaloes. On January 12, the Dodgers signed outfielder Teoscar Hernández to a one-year, $23.5 million contract. On January 29, the Dodgers signed pitcher James Paxton to a one-year, $11 million contract. On February 8, the Dodgers re-signed relief pitcher Ryan Brasier to a two-year, $9 million contract. The following day, they re-signed Clayton Kershaw to a one-year contract that contained a player option for the 2025 season.

Spring training
The Dodgers began spring training on February 8, 2024, when pitchers and catchers reported to Camelback Ranch in Glendale, Arizona with the first full squad workout on February 14 and the first Cactus League game on February 22. They finished 13–5–1 in the league schedule.

Both Dustin May and Tony Gonsolin were placed on the 60-day injured list at the start of camp as they recovered from their arm surgeries. On February 26, the Dodgers traded outfielder Manuel Margot to the Minnesota Twins and re-signed utility player Kiké Hernández to a one-year contract. On March 4, they acquired infielder Andre Lipcius from the Detroit Tigers for cash considerations and moved Clayton Kershaw to the 60-day injured list to make room on the roster. On March 11, the Dodgers announced that Tyler Glasnow would be the opening day starting pitcher. Lipcius was designated for assignment on March 16, when pitcher Daniel Hudson was added to the roster.

On March 16, several Dodgers minor leaguers participated in the inaugural "Spring Breakout" showcase, playing against a team of minor leaguers from the Los Angeles Angels organization. The Dodgers roster included top prospect Dalton Rushing

This season the Dodgers played exhibition games in South Korea against the Kiwoom Heroes and the Korea national baseball team on March 17 and 18 before opening the regular season with two games against the San Diego Padres at Gocheok Sky Dome as part of MLB World Tour. They then played three exhibition games in the Freeway Series against the Angels before the rest of the regular season commenced.

Game Log
Bold = Dodgers team member''
 * ''Legend:      = Win       = Loss       = Postponement
 * ''Legend:      = Win       = Loss       = Postponement

March
The Dodgers started their season on March 20 by playing the San Diego Padres at Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul, South Korea as part of the MLB World Tour. Tyler Glasnow started and allowed two runs in five innings as the Dodgers came from behind to score four runs in the eighth inning to win 5–2. The following day, Yoshinobu Yamamoto made his MLB debut for the Dodgers but only lasted one inning while giving up five runs. Mookie Betts had four hits in five at-bats, including a double and a home run and Will Smith also had four hits as the Dodgers offense produced 11 runs, only to lose 15–11 in a slugfest.

The Dodgers returned to California following the Seoul Series for the three game exhibition Freeway Series before resuming the regular season with the home opener on March 28 against the St. Louis Cardinals at Dodger Stadium. Glasnow allowed one run on two hits in six innings and Betts and Freddie Freeman homered in a 7–1 victory. In the next game, Bobby Miller struck out 11 with only two hits and one walk in six shutout innings while the Dodgers hit four home runs (including two by Teoscar Hernández) in a 6–3 win. Yamamoto made his second start in game 3, allowing only two hits in five scoreless innings while Betts had three hits, including homering in his fourth straight game. However, the Cardinals won the game in 10 innings, 6–5. The Dodgers concluded the series with a come from behind, 5–4 win on March 31 as Max Muncy's two-run home run in the eighth gave them the lead after having trailed 4–0 in the sixth.

April
April began with a three-game series against the San Francisco Giants. James Paxton pitched five shutout innings. Teoscar Hernández homered, Shohei Ohtani doubled and Mookie Betts tripled in an 8–3 victory. Betts homered again in the next game as the Dodgers won, 5–4. They finished the homestand with another 5–4 win during which Ohtani and Miguel Rojas homered.

Bobby Miller gave up five runs in only $1 2⁄3$ innings as the Dodgers began their first road trip of the season with a 9–7 loss to the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on April 5. In the next game, Yoshinobu Yamamoto struck out eight in five scoreless innings for his first major league win, 4–1, over the Cubs. The Cubs took the series with an 8–1 blow out in the finale. The road trip continued at Target Field as the Dodgers played the Minnesota Twins for three games. Home runs by James Outman and Ohtani in the seventh inning helped the Dodgers to a 4–2 comeback victory. In the following game, Tyler Glasnow struck out 14 while allowing only three hits in seven scoreless innings while Outman and Will Smith each hit three-run home runs in a 6–3 win. Miller struggled again in the series finale, allowing two runs on five hits and three walks in just four innings as the Twins won 3–2.

The Dodgers returned home on April 12 to play the San Diego Padres. They hit four home runs in the game, but the Padres matched them and then won in 11 innings, 8–7. The Dodgers evened the series with a 5–2 win the next day. Gavin Stone allowed two runs in a career high $6 2⁄3$ innings in the game. In the series finale, the Dodgers pitching staff issued 14 walks, the most the team had allowed in one game since the 1962 season and lost 6–3. The Washington Nationals came to town for the next series and opened it by beating the Dodgers, 6–4 with a three run fifth inning being the decider. In the next game, Betts had five hits in five at-bats, including two doubles, in a 6–2 win. The Nationals shut out the Dodgers, 2–0, to win the series. Next up was the New York Mets who beat the Dodgers 9–4. The Mets won the next game, 6–4, as the Dodgers left the bases loaded multiple times in the loss. The Dodgers ended the homestand by crushing the Mets, 10–0 on April 21, with eight of the runs scoring in the fifth inning. Ohtani hit his 176th career home run, passing Hideki Matsui for most by a Japanese-born Major Leaguer and Andy Pages hit his first MLB homer as well. Glasnow struck out 10 in eight shutout innings.

The Dodgers went back on the road on April 23 for a three-games series against the Nationals at Nationals Park. They took the opener, 4–1, as Ohtani homered and Kiké Hernández and James Outman had key RBI hits. Landon Knack allowed two runs in six innings to pick up his first major league win as the Dodgers routed the Nationals, 11–2. Betts and Will Smith each had four hits, Ohtani doubled three times and Pages hit his second homer in the game. The Dodgers finished off the sweep with a 2–1 victory in the finale. Yamamoto struck out seven in six scoreless innings and Kiké Hernández homered in the game. The next series was against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre. Gavin Stone allowed only two hits and one run in seven innings while the Dodgers hit three home runs enroute to a 12–2 victory. Glasnow struck out nine in six innings and Betts had three hits, including a triple, as the Dodgers took the next game, 4–2. Freddie Freeman homered in the finale but it was the only run allowed by Kevin Gausman in his seven innings as the Blue Jays ended the Dodgers winning streak with a 3–1 win. Pages had three RBIs as the Dodgers took the opener of a series against the Arizona Diamondbacks, 8–4, at Chase Field. The Dodgers batters didn't strike out at all in the game, for the first time since the 2006 season. The Diamondbacks won the next game, 4–3, on a walk-off two-run homer by Christian Walker in the 10th inning.

May
The Dodgers began the month of May by finishing off their series with the Diamondbacks with a 8–0 win. Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitched six shutout innings while Andy Pages and Will Smith homered in the game.

The Dodgers returned home on May 3 for a three-game weekend series against the Atlanta Braves. Andy Pages had four hits, including a walk-off single in the 11th inning for a 4–3 win. In the following game, Tyler Glasnow struck out 10 in seven innings and the Dodgers hit five homeruns (three of them by Max Muncy) in a 11–2 victory. Ohtani also hit his eighth homerun of the season in that game, breaking Dave Roberts' mark of seven homeruns to become the Japanese-born player with most homers in franchise history. The Dodgers finished off a sweep of the Braves with a 5–1 win in the series finale. Shohei Ohtani had four hits, including two home runs. Walker Buehler rejoined the Dodgers rotation on May 6, having missed most of two seasons after undergoing Tommy John surgery. He allowed three runs in four innings but the Dodgers hit four homeruns and won the game, 6–3. In the next game, Yamamoto allowed two runs in eight innings and Muncy hit a grand slam homer in the first inning, enroute to a 8–2 victory. The Dodgers completed an undefeated homestand by sweeping the Marlins with a 3–1 victory in the series finale. Gavin Stone allowed the one run in seven innings while Teoscar Hernández hit a two-run homer in the sixth inning for the go-ahead runs.

The Dodgers went to Petco Park for a series with the San Diego Padres beginning on May 10. Glasnow struck out 10 and allowed only one hit (a solo homer by Luis Campusano) in seven innings but Michael King shut out the Dodgers in his seven innings, allowing only two hits with 11 strikeouts of his own. The Dodgers tied the game on a Freddie Freeman RBI hit in the eighth but lost when Luis Arráez drove in pinch runner Tyler Wade for a walk-off in the ninth, 2–1. In the next game, James Paxton pitched six scoreless innings and Teoscar Hernández hit a grand slam home run in a 5–0 victory. The Padres won the series finale, 4–0, as Yu Darvish allowed only two hits and one walk in seven innings while striking out seven. The Dodgers next traveled to Oracle Park for a series with the San Francisco Giants. Mookie Betts led off the game with a homerun and Will Smith drove in the winning two runs with a double in the 10th inning for a 6–4 win. Ohtani had three hits, including a home run, as the Dodgers followed that up with a 10–2 win. The Giants took the next game, 4–1.

The Dodgers returned home on May 16 to begin a four-game series against the Cincinnati Reds. Elly De La Cruz reached base five times, with four hits and a walk, stole four bases and scored three runs as the Reds won the opener, 7–2. In the following game, the Dodgers got home runs from Betts, Ohtani and Jason Heyward as they won 7–3. Buehler struck out seven in six scoreless innings on May 18 to pick up his first win in almost two years in the Dodgers 4–0 triumph. The Dodgers finished off the series with a 3–2 victory in 10 innings as Ohtani drove in the winning run, his first walk-off with the Dodgers. The Dodgers next played three games against the Arizona Diamondbacks. On May 20, they hit three home runs (including a grand slam by Freddie Freeman) in a six-run third inning enroute to a 6–4 win. The Diamondbacks won the next game, 7–3, and then shutout the Dodgers in the finale, 6–0, for their first series win at Dodger Stadium since April of the 2018 season.

The Dodgers went back on the road on May 24 for a three-game series with the Reds at Great American Ball Park. The series opened with the Reds scoring six runs (including a grand slam home run by Jonathan India) in the fifth inning to win 9–6. In the next outing, Hunter Greene held the Dodgers to one run in a 3–1 Reds win and they finished off a sweep of the series with a 4–1 victory in the finale. The Dodgers traveled next to Citi Field to play the New York Mets. After a rainout on Memorial Day, the teams played a doubleheader on May 28. Glasnow struck out eight in the first game in seven innings, while allowing only a two-run homer by Francisco Lindor. Despite that they trailed until tying the game on a suicide squeeze by Chris Taylor in the ninth and then they won the game with three runs in the 10th inning to snap the five game losing streak with a 5—2 win. In the second game, Gavin Stone allowed only three hits while striking out seven in seven scoreless innings, Will Smith hit an opening inning home run and the Dodgers won 3–0. Smith hit two more homeruns in the next game as the Dodgers scored six runs in the eighth inning en route to a 10–3 win.

They returned home on May 31 to play the Colorado Rockies and lost the opener, 4–1, getting only five hits in the game against Dakota Hudson and two relievers. It was the Rockies first win in Los Angeles since the 2022 season.

June
June began with the Dodgers beating the Rockies, 4–1. Yoshinobu Yamamoto struck out seven in six innings, Andy Pages had three hits and Freddie Freeman tripled in the win. The next day, the Dodgers got first inning home runs from Mookie Betts and Freeman and won the game, 4–0.

After the brief homestand, they were back on the road for three games against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park. Tyler Glasnow struck out nine while only allowing one run (a solo homer by Jack Suwinski) in six innings but that was all the Pirates needed for a 1–0 win in the first game of the series. In the next game, James Paxton was shelled, allowing six earned runs in $1 2⁄3$ innings of a 10–6 loss. The Dodgers jumped out in the third game with four runs in the first inning thanks to a 3-run homer by Freeman. Teoscar Hernández had three hits, including a home run and Betts also homered as the Dodgers prevented a sweep with a 11–7 win. Next up was an interleague series against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Yamamoto struck out seven and allowed only two hits in seven scorelesss innings but the Dodgers also failed to score in regulation. Teoscar Hernández drove in two runs on a double in the 11th inning as they won the game 2–1. Hernández hit two home runs, including a grand slam, and drove in six as the Dodgers beat the Yankees, 11–3, in the second game of the series. In the finale, Glasnow struck out 12 in six innings but also allowed five runs, including a three-run homer by Trent Grisham in the fifth and the Yankees won 6–4.

The next homestand began on June 11 against the Texas Rangers. The Dodgers hit five home runs, four of them in the seventh inning, in a 15–2 rout in game 1. A three-run home run by Corey Seager in the fifth inning gave the Rangers a 3–2 win in the next game. The Rangers took the series with a 3–1 victory in the finale. Salvador Perez hit a three-run homerun in the fourth to give the Kansas City Royals a lead in the first game of the next series but the Dodgers tied it up in the fifth when Miguel Rojas and Chris Taylor each homered. The Dodgers won 4–3 thanks to a RBI hit by Freeman in the eighth. In the next game, MJ Melendez hit a grand slam off Blake Treinen in the sixth inning and the Royals won 7–2. In the series finale, Glasnow struck out nine while only allowing three hits and one walk in seven innings and the Dodgers hit three solo homeruns, two by Shohei Ohtani and one by Freeman in a 3–0 win.

Next up on the schedule was a four-game road series at Coors Field against the Colorado Rockies. James Paxton struck out eight while only allowing one run on two hits in seven innings, Will Smith tripled, and Ohtani had three hits as the Dodgers held on to win 7–5. In the following game, the Rockies led 9–4 heading into the ninth inning but a grand slam by Jason Heyward and a three-run homer by Hernández gave them an improbable 11–9 come-from-behind victory. Ohtani had two hits and three RBIs in the third game of the series, but the Rockies came from behind and won 7–6 on a walk-off sacrifice fly by Brenton Doyle. The Dodgers won the last game of the series, 5–3. Gavin Stone struck out seven in $5 1⁄3$ innings, Ohtani hit a lead off home run and Smith and Freeman hit back-to-back homers in the fourth.

Next up was a two-game home series against the Los Angeles Angels. In the first game, they took the lead on a two-run homer in the fifth by Ohtani but the Angels came back to tie the game and won 3–2 in 10 innings. Glasnow struck out 10 in seven innings, Ohtani homered for the third consecutive game and Gavin Lux also homered as the Dodgers took the second game, 7–2.

On June 24, the Dodgers traveled to Guaranteed Rate Field for a three-game series against the Chicago White Sox. They won 3–0 in the opener. Ohtani again led off the second game with a homer and Freeman also homered in a 4–3 win. It was the ninth straight game with an RBI for Ohtani, tying a Dodger record also held by Roy Campanella (1955), Augie Galan (1944) and Eddie Brown (1924). He homered again to lead off the next game, breaking the record. Stone pitched a complete game, four hit shutout with seven strikeouts as the Dodgers finished off the sweep with a 4–0 win. It was the first shutout by a Dodger pitcher since Walker Buehler in 2022 and first by a rookie pitcher since Hyun-jin Ryu in 2013. They next traveled to Oracle Park and lost the opener to the San Francisco Giants, 5–3, on a walk-off homer by Brett Wisely. In the next game, the Dodgers scored seven runs in the 11th inning to beat the Giants 14–7. However, they were routed by the Giants, 10–4, in the finale of the road trip.

July
The Dodgers began another homestand on July 2nd, playing the Arizona Diamondbacks. Shohei Ohtani hit another homer and the Dodgers won 6–5 on a walk-off hit by Teoscar Hernández. Christian Walker had four hits, including a double and two home runs, as the Diamondbacks routed the Dodgers 12–4. Walker hit another two homers in the next game, a 9–3 Diamondbacks win. The next series was against the Milwaukee Brewers. Will Smith had three home runs in the first game and Freddie Freeman drove in the go-ahead run on a hit in the eighth as the Dodgers came from behind to win 8–5. Smith homered again, in his first at-bat of the next game, tying him for the major league record of four home runs in four consecutive at-bats. The Dodgers won 5–3 after home runs by Miguel Vargas and Ohtani in the eighth inning. The Brewers won the last game of the series, 9–2.

The Dodgers next took a trip to Citizens Bank Park to play the top team in the National League, the Philadelphia Phillies. In the opener, Trea Turner hit a grand slam homer in the fourth inning as part of a 10–1 rout. Kyle Schwarber led off the next game with a homer and Matt Strahm struck out Ohtani with two men on base in the seventh inning to preserve a 4–3 win the second game and the Phillies finished off a sweep with a 5–1 win in the finale. They followed that up with a three-game series against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park. After falling behind early, the Dodgers came back with a Freeman homer, scoring the eventual winning run on a ground rule double by Ohtani in the ninth for a 4–3 win. In the next game, the Tigers scored five runs in the bottom of the ninth to erase a deficit and then won 11–9 on a walk-off homer by Gio Urshela in the 10th inning. The Dodgers scored three in the first in the final game of the series, but again blew the game in the ninth and lost 4–3.

The Dodgers had six players selected to the 2024 Major League Baseball All-Star Game: Pitcher Tyler Glasnow, catcher Will Smith, first baseman Freddie Freeman, shortstop Mookie Betts, outfielder Teoscar Hernández and designated hitter Shohei Ohtani. Hernández also participated in, and won, the 2024 Major League Baseball Home Run Derby, the first Dodger ever to win it.

After the all-star break, the Dodgers played a three-game series at home against the Boston Red Sox. They won the opener 4–1 thanks to a grand slam home run by Freeman in the eighth inning. In the next game, the Dodgers trailed going into the ninth inning only for Kiké Hernández to tie the game with a solo home run. Tyler O'Neill hit his second home run of the game in the 10th to put the Red Sox back up by two and Hernández again drove home the tying run, this time with a single. They won the game in the 11th, 7–6, on a Will Smith walk-off hit.

Statistics
Updated as of July 14

Batting
Stats in bold are the team leaders.

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Walks; SO = Strikeouts; SB = Stolen bases; AVG = Batting average; OBP = On-base percentage; SLG = Slugging percentage; OPS = On base + slugging

Pitching
''List does not include position players. Stats in bold are the team leaders.''

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts

March

 * On March 19, placed RHPs Walker Buehler (right elbow surgery), Brusdar Graterol (right shoulder inflammation), Emmet Sheehan (right forearm inflammation) and Blake Treinen (bruised lung) on the 15-day injured list. Recalled RHP Landon Knack from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On March 22, optioned RHPs J. P. Feyereisen, Landon Knack and Gus Varland to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On March 31, optioned RHP Kyle Hurt to AAA Oklahoma City, transferred RHP Emmet Sheehan from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list, and purchased the contract of RHP Nabil Crismatt from AAA Oklahoma City.

April

 * On April 1, purchased the contract of RHP Dinelson Lamet from AAA Oklahoma City and designated RHP Nabil Crismatt for assignment.
 * On April 2, claimed OF Taylor Trammell off waivers from the Seattle Mariners and released LHP Matt Gage. Acquired LHP Nick Ramirez from the New York Yankees in exchange for cash considerations and transferred RHP Brusdar Graterol from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.
 * On April 3, placed OF Jason Heyward on the 10-day injured list with lower back tightness, activated OF Taylor Trammell and optioned LHP Nick Ramirez to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On April 6, designated RHP Dinelson Lamet for assignment, recalled RHP Gus Varland from AAA Oklahoma City. Acquired RHP Connor Brogdon from the Philadelphia Phillies in exchange for minor leaguer Benony Robles.
 * On April 8, activated RHP Connor Brogdon and optioned RHP Gus Varland to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On April 13, placed RHPs Bobby Miller (shoulder inflammation) and Connor Brogdon (plantar fasciitis) on the 15-day disabled list and recalled RHP J. P. Feyereisen and LHP Nick Ramirez from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On April 15, recalled RHP Ricky Vanasco from AAA Oklahoma City and optioned RHP J. P. Feyereisen to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On April 16, optioned RHP Ricky Vanasco and LHP Nick Ramirez to AAA Oklahoma City, recalled RHP Kyle Hurt and OF Andy Pages from AAA Oklahoma City, purchased the contract of RHP Eduardo Salazar from AAA Oklahoma City and designated OF Taylor Trammell for assignment.
 * On April 17, optioned RHP Eduardo Salazar to AAA Oklahoma City and recalled RHP Landon Knack from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On April 20, placed RHP Kyle Hurt on the 15-day injured list with right shoulder inflammation and recalled LHP Nick Ramirez from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On April 27, optioned LHP Nick Ramirez to AAA Oklahoma City, purchased the contract of RHP Nabil Crismatt from AAA Oklahoma City and transferred RHP Kyle Hurt from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.
 * On April 29, placed RHP Ryan Brasier on the 15-day injured list with a right calf strain and recalled RHP Gus Varland from AAA Oklahoma City.

May

 * On May 2, optioned RHP Landon Knack to AAA Oklahoma City and recalled RHP J. P. Feyereisen from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On May 5, placed RHP Evan Phillips on the 15-day injured list with a right hamstring strain and activated RHP Blake Treinen from the 15-day injured list.
 * On May 6, placed RHP Joe Kelly on the 15-day injured list with right posterior shoulder strain and activated RHP Walker Buehler from the 15-day injured list.
 * On May 15, recalled RHP Eduardo Salazar from AAA Oklahoma City, purchased the contract of RHP Elieser Hernández from AAA Oklahoma City, optioned RHP Gus Varland to AAA Oklahoma City and designated RHP Nabil Crismatt for assignment.
 * On May 16, optioned RHP Eduardo Salazar to AAA Oklahoma City and recalled LHP Nick Ramirez from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On May 17, optioned OF James Outman and LHP Nick Ramirez to AAA Oklahoma City, recalled OF Miguel Vargas and RHP Ricky Vanasco from AAA Oklahoma City, activated OF Jason Heyward from the 10-day injured list and placed 3B Max Muncy on the 10-day injured list with a right oblique strain.
 * On May 19, optioned RHPs J. P. Feyereisen and Ricky Vanasco to AAA Oklahoma City, recalled RHP Landon Knack from AAA Oklahoma City, purchased LHP Anthony Banda from AAA Oklahoma City and transferred RHP Connor Brogdon from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.
 * On May 20, acquired RHP Yohan Ramírez from the New York Mets for cash considerations, optioned RHP Landon Knack to AAA Oklahoma City and designated RHP Eduardo Salazar for assignment.
 * On May 28, added LHP Nick Ramirez as the 27-man for a doubleheader.
 * On May 31, activated RHP Evan Phillips from the 15-day injured list and designated RHP Elieser Hernández for assignment.

June

 * On June 12, acquired IF/OF Cavan Biggio and cash considerations from the Toronto Blue Jays in exchange for minor league pitcher Braydon Fisher. Optioned OF Miguel Vargas to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On June 14, acquired LHP José Hernández from the Pittsburgh Pirates for cash considerations and transferred RHP Ryan Brasier from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.
 * On June 16, placed RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the 15-day injured list with a strained rotator cuff and RHP Michael Grove on the 15-day injured list with a right intercostal strain, recalled RHP J. P. Feyereisen from AAA Oklahoma City, purchased the contract of RHP Michael Petersen from AAA Oklahoma City and transferred RHP Joe Kelly from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.
 * On June 17, placed IF Mookie Betts on the 10–day injured list with a fractured left wrist and recalled OF Miguel Vargas from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On June 19, placed RHP Walker Buehler on the 15-day injured list with right hip inflammation and activated RHP Bobby Miller from the 15-day injured list.
 * On June 21, recalled RHP Landon Knack from AAA Oklahoma City, optioned RHP J. P. Feyereisen to AAA Oklahoma City, activated RHP Kyle Hurt from the 60-day injured list and optioned him to AAA Oklahoma City, transferred IF Max Muncy from the 10-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.

July

 * On July 3, purchased the contract of RHP Matt Gage from AAA Oklahoma City and optioned him to AAA Oklahoma City, outrighted RHP J. P. Feyereisen to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On July 4, recalled LHP Nick Ramirez from AAA Oklahoma City and optioned RHP Michael Peterson to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On July 5, optioned LHP Nick Ramirez to AAA Oklahoma City, placed OF Jason Heyward on the 10-day injured list with a left knee bone bruise and recalled RHP Gus Varland and OF James Outman from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On July 7, purchased LHP Justin Wrobleski from AAA Oklahoma City, optioned RHP Gus Varland to AAA Oklahoma City and traded RHP Matt Gage to the New York Mets in exchange for cash considerations.
 * On July 9, placed RHP Tyler Glasnow on the 15-day injured list with lower back tightness and recalled RHP Michael Peterson from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On July 10, optioned RHP Bobby Miller to AAA Oklahoma City and recalled RHP Ricky Vanasco from AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On July 13, claimed RHP Brent Honeywell Jr. off waivers from the Pittsburgh Pirates and transferred RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day injured list.
 * On July 18, outrighted LHP José Hernández to the Arizona Complex League Dodgers.
 * On July 19, activated RHP Joe Kelly from the 60-day injured list and optioned RHP Michael Peterson to AAA Oklahoma City.
 * On July 21, activated OF Jason Heyward from the 10-day injured list and optioned OF James Outman to AAA Oklahoma City.

Farm system
After the 2023 season, the Dodgers Triple-A franchise removed the Dodgers branding and changed their name to the Oklahoma City Baseball Club for one year while the organization determined on new branding for future seasons.

Standings updated as of July 14

Major League Baseball Draft
The 2024 Draft will be held July 14–16, 2024. The Dodgers forfeted their second and fifth round picks by signing free agent Shohei Ohtani.