The NBA’s minimum salary is one of several figures that changes from year to year at the same rate as the league’s salary cap. If the cap increases by 5% from one season to the next, the minimum salary will rise by the same amount.
That means that even though we don’t know yet exactly where the minimum salaries will end up for the 2026/27 season, we can make an educated estimate. The NBA’s most recent projection for ’26/27 called for a $166MM cap, which is the number we’ll use to project next season’s minimum salaries.
[RELATED: NBA Minimum Salaries For 2025/26]
A player’s minimum salary is determined in part by how much NBA experience he has — a veteran who has 10+ seasons under his belt is eligible for a significantly higher minimum salary than a rookie would be.
Based on the current 2026/27 cap estimate, next year’s rookie minimum salary will approach $1.37MM, while the minimum for a veteran with 10+ years of service will surpass $3.9MM.
Here are the current minimum salary projections for the 2026/27 season, using a $166,000,000 cap:
| Years of Experience | Salary |
|---|---|
| 0 | $1,366,314 |
| 1 | $2,198,879 |
| 2 | $2,464,849 |
| 3 | $2,553,508 |
| 4 | $2,642,165 |
| 5 | $2,863,807 |
| 6 | $3,085,455 |
| 7 | $3,307,099 |
| 8 | $3,528,745 |
| 9 | $3,546,312 |
| 10+ | $3,900,945 |
It’s worth noting that these figures will only apply to players who sign new minimum-salary contracts in 206/27. The ’26/27 salaries for players with multiyear minimum deals will look a little different. For example, a rookie who signed a two-year deal worth the minimum ahead of the 2025/26 season would have a second-year salary of $2,150,917 for ’26/27, as we outline here.
We’ll update these projections later in the season if the NBA adjusts its cap estimate for the 2026/27 season, and then again next year when the league officially sets the ’26/27 cap.
The deal was actually completed in July, but slipped through the cracks for us at the time. Even though we’re a couple weeks late, we still want to dedicate a full story to the next stop for a player who was selected 40th overall in the 2023 draft and has spent the past two seasons in the NBA.
“We are very excited that Joe has agreed to extend with the Celtics,” president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said in a statement. “He understands the job and has a passion for the Celtics that is only rivaled by our most die-hard fans. He’s worked hard and accomplished amazing things in his first three years as a head coach – including averaging over 60 wins per season and winning the 2024 NBA Championship.
“I can report that there have been multiple teams that have reached out to Josh Giddey’s representation about having interest in [him],” Fischer said. “Golden State is one of them. Golden State would be interested, depending on how the machinations would go, in some kind of Josh Giddey-Jonathan Kuminga sign-and-trade, to my understanding.”