The Los Angeles Lakers agreed to a four-year maximum contract extension with guard Austin Reaves, keeping him under contract through the 2029-30 season. The deal was announced Monday morning with no disclosed financial terms, a departure from the franchise's usual practice with marquee deals. Reaves becomes the third Laker locked beyond LeBron James's playing horizon.
Reaves, 26, averaged 18.2 points and 5.1 assists last season while shooting 37% from three on 6.4 attempts per game. He started all 76 games he appeared in and finished ninth in the league in minutes played. The extension arrives two years into his original four-year, $53.8 million deal—itself a restricted free agency outcome in 2023 where the Lakers matched an offer sheet rather than lose an undrafted asset. His new maximum contract will begin in the 2026-27 season and could approach $240 million depending on cap escalation and whether Los Angeles triggers second-apron luxury tax penalties that adjust max salary calculations.
The timing matters more than the amount. Los Angeles now carries three max-level contracts through at least 2028: Anthony Davis ($62.2 million in 2027-28), Reaves, and whatever bridge deal or succession plan replaces James. The Lakers operate $12 million over the second apron this season, a threshold that restricts trade flexibility, eliminates the taxpayer mid-level exception, and freezes first-round picks seven years out if sustained for three consecutive seasons. Reaves's extension ensures that restriction continues unless the front office sheds salary elsewhere. Dallas and Milwaukee have already triggered frozen picks. The Lakers are one cycle away.
For Reaves, the deal converts perceived leverage into guaranteed money before his market test. He would have been a restricted free agent in 2027 had the Lakers declined to extend him now, but waiting risked injury or the statistical plateau common among guards who post career years in contract walks. His agent, Aaron Mintz of CAA, negotiated similar early maximums for Darius Garland and Tyrese Maxey—both of whom signed extensions before their true free agency windows opened. The strategy: compress the negotiation window when the team has emotional attachment and no competitive bidding. Reaves wore a custom Kobe tribute sneaker to the press availability. He mentioned wanting to "build something" three times in four minutes of remarks.
The Lakers now face a narrower path to roster upgrades. Their 2026 first-round pick is unprotected and already owed to New Orleans unless it conveys this season. The second apron prohibits salary aggregation in trades, meaning any mid-season move for a rotation player requires matching salary within 110% of incoming money—difficult when Reaves, Davis, and James (if he returns on a veteran extension) account for roughly 65% of the cap. The front office will rely on minimum deals, the room mid-level exception if they dip below the apron, and hoping Austin Reaves remains Austin Reaves through age 30.
Two developments to track: whether the Lakers make a corresponding move to duck under the second apron before the season starts—unlikely given their stated championship window—and whether Reaves's endorsement portfolio expands now that his contract status matches his usage rate. He currently has deals with Rigorer (shoes), BodyArmor, and Panini, but no signature sneaker line. That changes if he sustains 18 points on winning basketball while playing in Los Angeles. His agent already took meetings with two athletic apparel brands during Summer League. One executive noted Reaves has "that Oklahoma thing"—code for broad middle-American appeal in a league that tilts coastal.
The Lakers open training camp in 11 days. Reaves will enter as the franchise's second-highest-paid player by 2027.