The NBA salary cap is somewhat malleable, with various exceptions allowing each team to surpass the $154,647,000 threshold once its cap room is used up. In some cases, teams blow past not only the cap limit, but the luxury tax line of $187,895,000 as well — the Cavaliers, Celtics, and Mavericks are among the clubs who project to have substantial tax bills this season as a result of their spending.
The NBA doesn’t have a “hard cap” by default, which allows clubs like Cleveland, Boston, and Dallas to build a significant payroll without violating NBA rules. However, there are certain scenarios in which teams can be hard-capped.
The league’s new Collective Bargaining Agreement has carried over the hard cap rules from the 2017 CBA while also expanding them, adding new scenarios in which teams can face hard caps and creating a second salary level that certain teams can’t exceed.
We go into greater detail in a separate article on how teams become hard-capped, but here’s a brief rundown of the ways it can happen in 2025/26:
A team becomes hard-capped at the first tax apron ($195,945,000) if it makes any of the following moves:Acquires a player via sign-and-trade.
Uses more than the taxpayer portion (up to two years, with a starting salary of $5,685,000) of the mid-level exception to sign a player.
Uses any portion of the mid-level exception to acquire a player via trade or waiver claim.
Uses any portion of the bi-annual exception to sign a player or to acquire a player via trade or waiver claim.
Uses the expanded traded player exception.
Uses a traded player exception generated during the previous offseason or regular season.
Signs a player who was waived during the regular season and whose pre-waiver salary was higher than the non-taxpayer mid-level exception ($14,104,000).
A team becomes hard-capped at the second tax apron ($207,824,000) if it makes any of the following moves:Uses any portion of the mid-level exception to sign a player to a contract.
Aggregates two or more players in a trade for salary-matching purposes.
Sends out cash in a trade.
Sends out a player via sign-and-trade and uses that player’s outgoing salary to take back a contract (either in the same transaction or in a subsequent transaction via the resulting trade exception).
Given how many ways there are to create a hard cap, most clubs who don’t intend to operate over one of the two aprons will likely end up hard-capping themselves at one or the other.
Some teams will have to be hyper-aware of that hard cap when they consider any roster move for the rest of the season, but for others it’s just a technicality that won’t affect their plans in any meaningful way.
Listed below are the hard-capped teams for the 2025/26 league year, along with how they created a hard cap.
In some instances, a team made multiple roster moves that would have imposed a hard cap (e.g. acquired a player via sign-and-trade and used the non-taxpayer mid-level exception). Only the first of those transactions is noted below, though in some cases a team made two moves within a single transaction to create a hard cap, in which case each relevant move is mentioned.
Hard-capped at first tax apron
These teams will be prohibited from exceeding $195,945,000 in team salary.
Atlanta Hawks
Charlotte Hornets
Chicago Bulls
Used expanded traded player exception to acquire Isaac Okoro.
Detroit Pistons
Houston Rockets
Indiana Pacers
Los Angeles Clippers
Used the non-taxpayer mid-level exception to sign Brook Lopez.
Los Angeles Lakers
Used the non-taxpayer mid-level exception to sign Jake LaRavia.
Memphis Grizzlies
Miami Heat
New Orleans Pelicans
Orlando Magic
Used the non-taxpayer mid-level exception to sign Tyus Jones.
Portland Trail Blazers
Used expanded traded player exception to acquire Jrue Holiday.
Sacramento Kings
San Antonio Spurs
Used the non-taxpayer mid-level exception to sign Luke Kornet.
Utah Jazz
Used the non-taxpayer mid-level exception to acquire Kyle Anderson.
Used the bi-annual exception to acquire Kevin Love.
Washington Wizards
Hard-capped at second tax apron
These teams will be prohibited from exceeding $207,824,000 in team salary.
Brooklyn Nets
Sent out cash in a trade.
Dallas Mavericks
New York Knicks
No hard cap
Boston Celtics
Cleveland Cavaliers
Denver Nuggets
Golden State Warriors
Milwaukee Bucks
Minnesota Timberwolves
Oklahoma City Thunder
Philadelphia 76ers
Phoenix Suns
Toronto Raptors
This list, which figures to continue evolving, will be updated throughout the 2024/25 league year as necessary. It can be found anytime in the “Hoops Rumors Features” menu on the right-hand sidebar of our desktop site, or in the “Features” menu on our mobile site.