NBA's $82M Single-Season Contract Window Opens in 2025 Free Agency
Cap projections show payroll architecture permits unprecedented single-year salary; front offices run scenarios on tax thresholds and roster construction.
Published April 29, 2026Source ESPNFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
NBA
GOLD · April 29, 2026
MACALLAN 1926· April 29, 2026
NBA's $82M Single-Season Contract Window Opens in 2025 Free Agency
Cap projections show payroll architecture permits unprecedented single-year salary; front offices run scenarios on tax thresholds and roster construction.
The NBA's 2025 free agency class could produce the league's first $82 million single-season contract, according to salary cap projections released this week. The figure represents the maximum allowable salary for a player signing a one-year deal under the current collective bargaining agreement's percentage-of-cap structure, and three front offices confirmed they are modeling scenarios for such a contract.
The arithmetic is straightforward. The league projects a $141 million salary cap for the 2025-26 season, up from $136 million this year. Under CBA rules, a player with ten or more years of service signing with his current team can claim 35 percent of the cap on a one-year maximum deal. That lands at $82.3 million for a single season, roughly $12 million above the highest annual salary currently on the books. LeBron James holds the existing record at $48.7 million for this season, though his deal spans multiple years and was signed under prior cap projections.
The $82 million threshold matters because it forces luxury-tax calculations into territory most ownership groups have avoided. A team signing such a contract would likely push total payroll above $200 million, triggering the second apron at approximately $189 million and incurring repeater-tax penalties that can reach $6.75 per dollar spent beyond that line. One Western Conference executive, speaking without attribution, noted his ownership approved preliminary modeling for a one-year max but required line-item breakdowns on three-year tax exposure before the July moratorium. The implication: boards are willing to entertain the number if it solves a championship window problem, but they want the bill itemized.
Three players are positioned to command such a deal. Kevin Durant, who turns 37 in September, could opt out of his current contract and sign a one-year max to time free agency with another franchise move. Giannis Antetokounmpo, extension-eligible this summer, could decline Milwaukee's offer and force a one-year prove-it structure before 2026 unrestricted status. Nikola Jokić, under contract through 2028, would need to waive his current deal, an unlikely path but one Denver's front office has discussed in the context of roster flexibility. All three have the service time; all three have the leverage.
Sponsorship implications are less obvious but worth noting. A single player consuming 58 percent of the cap—roughly the effective burden once tax multipliers apply—changes jersey inventory dynamics and local media spend. One apparel executive said his company ran projections on Durant-to-Miami scenarios last month, calculating incremental revenue from a single-season splash signing at $18 million in regional retail alone. That figure assumes Durant plays 70 games and the team reaches the second round. The margin tightens if either assumption fails, but the executive's point stands: a one-year max becomes a sponsorship event, not just a payroll entry.
The structural question is whether any team uses this tool in 2025 or waits until 2026, when the cap is projected to rise another $7 million and the absolute dollar figure climbs to $88 million. Phoenix, Miami, and the Lakers are the franchises with both the cap mechanics and the organizational appetite to absorb the tax hit, according to two agents who represent max-level clients. All three have aging rosters, all three have ownership groups that have previously paid into the luxury tax, and all three face narrow championship windows that make a single-season bet less reckless than it appears on a spreadsheet.
Watch for extension negotiations with Antetokounmpo before June 30, when Milwaukee's front office must decide whether to pre-empt this scenario or let it play out. Phoenix's ownership, meanwhile, meets in early April to set summer strategy, and Durant's name is expected on the agenda. The Athletic reported last month that Durant has not ruled out a one-year deal if it gives him trade flexibility in 2026, though his agent declined to confirm. Miami's front office, for its part, has quietly modeled a one-year max structure for an unnamed target, according to a person with knowledge of the discussions.
The $82 million contract will happen. The only question is which franchise writes the check and whether they get a trophy or a cautionary tale.
The takeaway
NBA's **$82M** single-season max becomes viable in 2025; front offices model tax exposure as Durant, Giannis scenarios take shape.
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