Austin Reaves, the 27-year-old guard who averaged 18.2 points across the Lakers' first-round playoff exit, is pursuing a maximum contract extension as his restricted free agency window opens July 1. His representatives have signaled a floor around $120M over four years, according to two people familiar with the discussions. The Lakers' front office, already committed to $101M for LeBron James and Anthony Davis next season, now calculates whether Reaves—undrafted in 2021, signed for $1.6M annually—commands near-max money or walks into an offer sheet the team declines to match.
The math is narrow. Los Angeles sits $11M below the second luxury tax apron at roughly $189M in committed salary, a threshold that triggers roster-building restrictions including frozen draft-pick trading and no midlevel exception. A Reaves deal starting near $30M annually pushes the Lakers into that zone, limiting GM Rob Pelinka's ability to add rotation pieces around a 40-year-old James. The front office has until late June to extend Reaves before he hits restricted free agency; after that, any offer sheet from another team gives the Lakers three days to match or lose him for nothing. Pelinka's camp has floated deals in the $22M-$25M range, structurally closer to what Tyler Herro received from Miami ($120M over four years in 2023) than the $140M Reaves' agents reportedly seek.
The tension is roster composition versus optionality. Reaves shot 42.7% from three this season and has become the Lakers' most reliable secondary creator when Davis sits or James rests. But paying him max-adjacent money locks the Lakers into a three-player core with little financial flexibility to address backup center depth, perimeter defense, or injury replacement—categories that cost them against Denver in April. Rival executives note the restricted free agency calendar: teams can begin negotiating with Reaves on July 1, with offer sheets formalized by mid-July. The Nets, Pistons, and Spurs—all with cap space exceeding $25M—have quietly asked about Reaves' interest, per league sources. Brooklyn's front office, in particular, views him as a culture piece who can anchor a rebuilding backcourt while maintaining veteran leadership. An offer sheet from a cap-space team above $28M annually forces Pelinka to match or pivot.
Ownership's calculus extends beyond 2025-26. Jeanie Buss has historically resisted deep luxury tax bills unless the roster projects as a genuine Finals contender, a threshold the current Lakers do not clearly meet after three consecutive first-round exits. The second apron also prohibits aggregating salaries in trades, meaning the Lakers cannot package mid-tier contracts to acquire a third star if Reaves' deal pushes them over $189M. Pelinka's alternative path: sign Reaves to a shorter extension around $90M over three years, preserving cap maneuverability in 2027 when James' deal expires. That structure pays Reaves near $30M annually without long-term apron exposure, though it risks alienating a player whose camp has made four-year security the baseline ask.
Watch the June 30 extension deadline and Brooklyn's front office movements. If Pelinka cannot close a deal by month-end, Reaves enters restricted free agency where offer sheets formalize by July 15. The Nets' new GM Sean Marks has $33M in cap room and needs backcourt talent; an offer sheet at $29M annually would force the Lakers' hand within 72 hours. Separately, the Lakers' draft positioning—pick 55 in this June's draft—may signal whether they plan to add cheap rotation depth or save the slot for a future trade. Pelinka's next board meeting with Buss is scheduled for early June.
Reaves' agent, Aaron Mintz of CAA, represents 14 NBA players with contracts exceeding $20M annually. His clients do not typically accept hometown discounts.