Tom Brady continues to win at life.

The five-time Super Bowl winner not only lives in a mansion, has a supermodel wife, a loving family and stunningly good-looks (admit it), but he also has more money than he knows what to do with and seems to be genuinely happy.

On Friday, that amount of money in his bank account got even larger.

According to ProFootballTalk, Brady received the second installment of his $28 million signing bonus on Friday, earning $14 million as part of his latest contract extension.

That must be nice.

However, via Mike Florio of PFT, Brady is set to be vastly underpaid based on his market value over the next couple of seasons.

“Brady’s salary for 2017 is a paltry $1 million, but bonus payments put his cap number at $14 million. In 2018, Brady has a salary of $14 million and a cap number of $22 million. He can make another $1 million in per-game roster bonuses. For 2019, the same terms apply.”

Florio continued, “Brady still remains underpaid, but at his own volition. He consistently has taken less than he could get, if he wanted to push it as aggressively as he could. Instead, Brady has left millions on the table in order to ensure that the Patriots will have the cash and cap space to put a quality team around him.”

Therefore, it’s easy to claim that winning five Super Bowl rings didn’t come without some financial sacrifice for TB12, who is arguably the best quarterback to ever live.

Since he structured his contract in the most team-friendly way possible, it allowed the franchise to put pieces around him that obviously resulted in success at the highest level.

In 12 regular season games last season, at age 39, Brady led the Patriots to a 11-1 record after missing the first four games of the season due to suspension. Completing 67.4 percent of his passes for 3,554 yards, 28 touchdowns and just two interceptions, Brady was consistently one of the best quarterbacks in the entire NFL week after week.

In the playoff run, he completed 65.5 percent of his passes for 1,137 yards in the three victories with seven touchdowns and three interceptions.

For his career, he has gone 183-52 with 61,582 passing yards and 456 touchdowns with 152 interceptions in the regular season while going 25-9 in the playoffs with 9,094 passing yards, 63 touchdowns and 31 interceptions.

The former sixth round pick out of Michigan has been a role model both on and off the field and still has many years ahead of him, in which he will presumably continue playing at a high level.