Seattle SuperSonics fans during an NBA game.
Seattle is closer than it has been in years to getting the NBA back, but the league has not yet formally awarded the city a franchise. What the NBA’s Board of Governors approved was the next step: a process to explore expansion bids and applicants in Seattle and Las Vegas.
That still makes this a major development for Seattle. ESPN reported the league is targeting the 2028-29 season for two expansion teams to begin play, which means the SuperSonics’ return now feels far more like a matter of timing and process than a distant idea.
Key Points
The NBA approved exploration of expansion bids for Seattle and Las Vegas, not the final award of teams.
ESPN reported the league is targeting the 2028-29 season for the new franchises to start play.
Seattle’s team name, colors, and history were left behind in 2008 and can be transferred to a future Seattle franchise with NBA approval.
This starts the NBA's 32-team expansion process. Multiple high-ranking officials have termed expansion as "when, not if." Now the NBA will examine Seattle and Las Vegas bids over the next several months, and whether to execute the new franchise purchases now or in a few years. https://t.co/Rkd0fZ41c7
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) March 25, 2026
What did the NBA actually approve?
The important distinction is that the NBA approved the expansion process, not a completed expansion. ESPN reported the vote allows the league to explore bids and applicants specifically for Seattle and Las Vegas. That starts the road to 32 teams, but ownership groups, financial terms, and final league approvals still have to follow.
In other words, Seattle did not go from no team to opening night in one vote. It went from long-term candidate to formal next-step market.
Are the Seattle SuperSonics definitely coming back?
Seattle is in strong position, but “definitely” is still too strong today because the final franchise award has not happened yet. What can be said now is that the NBA has put Seattle squarely in the active expansion lane, and the city checks the two biggest boxes that always mattered: market strength and a modern arena.
Climate Pledge Arena opened after a major renovation and is already home to the NHL’s Kraken and the WNBA’s Storm. ESPN noted last week that Seattle has been without an NBA team since 2008, when the SuperSonics relocated to Oklahoma City, and that the arena situation is now dramatically different from the one that existed when the team left.
That is why this development feels more serious than past speculation. Seattle has the building. Now it has the formal process.
Would Seattle get the SuperSonics name and history back?
That is one of the biggest questions attached to this story, and the answer points strongly toward yes.
When the franchise left for Oklahoma City in 2008, ESPN reported that the team name, colors and 41 years of history were being left in Seattle. A later ESPN report on the settlement said Bennett would retain the legal rights temporarily but agreed not to use them, and that if a new NBA team arrived in Seattle, those rights would be turned over to the new owner at no cost, subject to NBA approval.
So while the league has not formally unveiled a future Seattle identity, the path for a return of the SuperSonics brand has long been built into the post-relocation agreement.
When could Seattle’s team start playing?
The clearest reported timeline so far is 2028-29. ESPN reported the league is targeting that season for the two expansion franchises to begin play, and also said the bidding process could generate offers in the $7 billion to $10 billion range for each team.
That timeline matters because it frames what comes next. Seattle’s return, if finalized, would not be an immediate next-season launch. It would require ownership, league approvals, business operations, front-office hiring, coaching staff assembly, and eventually expansion-draft mechanics.
That is the practical takeaway: the biggest hurdle may have been getting the process formally started, but the league still has real work to do before Seattle is back on the floor.
What happens next?
The next step is the bidding and applicant process the NBA just authorized. After that comes the final approval stage on ownership groups, economics, and launch timing.
Seattle now has something it has lacked for years: a live path back to the league. But the most accurate way to put it today is this, the SuperSonics are not officially back yet, though the road to bring them back is now open.