Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant—combined $1.06 billion in career earnings, four rings, two Finals MVPs—will both become unrestricted free agents in July 2026. So will Austin Reaves, Jalen Duren, and Mitchell Robinson, three players whose next contracts will reset positional value benchmarks across the league. It is the deepest single free agency class since 2010, when LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh moved in unison.
Curry turns 38 that March. Durant turns 38 five months later. Both are entering the final year of extensions signed when the salary cap still lived below $130 million; it will approach $155 million by 2026. League insiders expect Curry to command a three-year deal near $175 million if Golden State wants to keep him through his 40th birthday. Durant's market depends on workload—he has averaged 35 minutes per game over the past two seasons for Phoenix, down from the 37-38 range he held in Brooklyn. If he stays above 32 minutes and the Suns reach the second round in 2025 and 2026, a two-year, $110 million framework is plausible.
Reaves, Duren, and Robinson represent a different calculation. Reaves—16.8 points, 5.1 assists in his fourth season—is the best non-lottery pick Los Angeles has developed since Marc Gasol. He will be 25 when he hits the market. Front offices are already comparing his case to Tyler Herro's four-year, $130 million extension, but Reaves shoots 38 percent from three on high volume and defends multiple positions. A five-year max offer sheet from a team with cap space—Oklahoma City, Utah, San Antonio all project room—would force the Lakers to match near $220 million. Rob Pelinka has told confidants the Lakers will match any number.
Duren is the youngest of the group, 22 when free agency opens. He averaged 13.8 rebounds per game last season, second in the league behind only Domantas Sabonis. Detroit has $68 million committed to Cade Cunningham, Jaden Ivey, and Tobias Harris in 2026-27. A Duren extension north of $120 million over four years would hard-cap the franchise's flexibility until 2030, but letting him reach restricted free agency invites an offer sheet the Pistons may not want to match if another team front-loads year one at $35 million. Charlotte, Washington, and Portland all have the space. Trajan Langdon has not ruled out trading Duren before the 2026 deadline if extension talks stall.
Robinson's market is murkier. He has played more than 60 games in a season once. When healthy, he is the league's best offensive-rebounding center—4.1 per game over his career—but New York already has $160 million committed in 2026-27 and will prioritize extending Mikal Bridges that summer. If Robinson finishes this season above 70 games and the Knicks advance past the second round, a three-year, $45 million deal is reasonable. If he misses significant time again, he is looking at a one-year prove-it contract in the $8-12 million range.
The collision of aging superstars and cost-controlled starters in the same summer creates structural tension. Teams with cap space can bid against clubs trying to retain incumbent talent, forcing decisions about roster flexibility versus continuity. The Lakers will almost certainly keep Reaves. Golden State will almost certainly keep Curry. The Suns, Pistons, and Knicks are less certain. Phoenix has $189 million committed before Durant re-signs; Devin Booker and Bradley Beal alone account for $112 million in 2026-27. Detroit's young core will be expensive by then. New York's tax bill already exceeds $90 million this season.
Agents are already gaming scenarios. Klutch Sports represents both Reaves and Duren; Rich Paul has told rival agents he expects both players to receive max or near-max offers, and he is positioning summer 2026 as the inflection point where teams either commit to their cores or restart. CAA represents Robinson. His timeline depends entirely on health, and the Knicks have made clear they will not negotiate before seeing a full season.
The 2026 draft class is considered weak—no consensus top-five talents as of this writing—which makes free agency the primary talent-acquisition lever that summer. Teams are already modeling cap scenarios. Oklahoma City has $41 million in space projected. San Antonio has $38 million. Utah has $52 million if it declines options on three veteran contracts. All three franchises are expected to make aggressive offers to at least one player in this cohort.
Coordinator hires and extension timelines over the next eighteen months will clarify which teams are positioning for 2026 cap space and which are locking in continuity. Golden State's decision on Andrew Wiggins' $26.3 million option for 2026-27 is due by June 2026, one month before free agency opens. Phoenix must decide whether to extend Booker again or let him become a free agent in 2027, a choice that affects how much flexibility the franchise has to retain Durant. Detroit's front office is expected to meet with Duren's representation in May 2025 to gauge extension interest before the season begins.
The exact contracts signed in summer 2026 will reset veteran superstar value, positional benchmarks for centers, and the Lakers' long-term payroll structure. The league has not seen this much talent hit the market simultaneously since the cap spiked in 2016. That summer, teams handed out $2.9 billion in guaranteed money across 157 contracts. The 2026 class is smaller but deeper. The checks will be larger.