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NBA salary cap rises 6.5% as free-agent negotiations begin

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 6:48 PM

The NBA announced Tuesday that the salary cap for the 2026-27 season has been set at $164.961 million, which represents a ​6.5% increase over the previous season.

In conjunction ‌with the $10,420,000 rise in each team’s cap, the minimum team salary has climbed over $9.2 million to $148.465 million. The first apron level has jumped to $209.015 million — an increase ‌of $13,070,000 — ​and the second apron level ⁠has moved to $221.686 million. ⁠That’s a rise of $13,862,000.

All of these numbers go into effect at 12:01 a.m. ET on Wednesday, six hours after NBA teams were permitted ​to start negotiating with free agents. That period began at 6 p.m. Tuesday ET.

All free ⁠agent negotiations technically must ⁠cease at midnight Tuesday. That’s when ​the league’s moratorium period goes into effect until noon ​on Monday, July 6.

According to Spotrac.com, all ‌30 NBA teams except the Memphis Grizzlies are over the new cap number. The Denver Nuggets, Oklahoma City Thunder and Orlando Magic are above ⁠the first apron, but no teams are hard-capped at this time by the second apron.

However, being over the ⁠cap does ‌not necessarily mean the same thing ⁠as being out of cap space.

Per ​Spotrac, ‌the Los Angeles Lakers, Brooklyn Nets ​and Chicago ⁠Bulls each are projected to have at least $30 million in cap space to use on prospective free agents. The Detroit Pistons and Los Angeles Clippers can make moves to free up cap space.

–Field ​Level Media