The NBA announced its salary cap for the 2022-23 season at $123,655,000. That’s the maximum 10 percent increase allowed over last year’s $112,414,000 cap, based on the agreement between the league and the National Basketball Players Association coming out of the pandemic. The luxury tax was set at $150,267,000 with the apron (or hard cap, when triggered) at $156,983,000.
The league is clearly rebounding well from two challenging seasons through the pandemic. Basketball-related income for 2021-22 was $8.892 billion. Salaries for players for 2021-22 totaled $4.09 billion (plus $280 million in benefits for a total of $4.37 million).
The salary cap will impact several important figures heading into the 2022 offseason:
YOS |
Maximum Salaries |
0-6 | $30,913,750 |
7-9 | $37,096,500 |
10+ | $43,279,250 |
YOS |
Minimum Salaries |
0 | $1,017,781 |
1 | $1,637,966 |
2 | $1,836,090 |
3 | $1,902,133 |
4 | $1,968,175 |
5 | $2,133,278 |
6 | $2,298,385 |
7 | $2,463,490 |
8 | $2,628,597 |
9 | $2,641,682 |
10+ | $2,905,851 |
Note: the NBA reimburses teams for the amount over the two YOS veteran minimum, provided the contract is a one-year minimum deal. In those cases, the player will count against the cap at the two YOS minimum, which would also be their outgoing salary in trade.
The following exceptions were also set:
Exception | 2022-23 |
Non-Taxpayer Mid-Level | $10,490,000 |
Taxpayer Mid-Level | $6,479,000 |
Room Mid-Level | $5,401,000 |
Bi-Annual | $4,105,000 |
Early Bird | $10,843,350 |
Teams below the salary cap will have access to just the Room Mid-Level Exception (RMLE). Those who do not drop under the salary cap but stay below the NBA’s hard cap (or apron) can use the Non-Taxpayer Mid-Level (NTMLE) and Bi-Annual (BAE) Exceptions. Tax teams above the apron will only have the Taxpayer Mid-Level (TMLE). The estimated average player salary for 2022-23 is $10,792,000.
Rookie-scale contracts (for the top-30 draft picks in June) will earn a range based on the following schedule. The scale amount for the No. 1 pick (Paolo Banchero of the Orlando Magic), is $9,212,600 for the first year, though it’s nearly a standard for first-rounders to earn the maximum 120 percent of scale:
Pick | 2022-23 | 2023-24 | 2024-25 | 2025-26 | Proj. Qualifying Offer |
1 | $11,055,120 | $11,608,080 | $12,160,800 | $15,334,769 | $19,935,200 |
2 | $9,891,240 | $10,386,000 | $10,880,640 | $13,731,368 | $17,919,435 |
3 | $8,882,640 | $9,326,520 | $9,770,880 | $12,350,392 | $16,203,714 |
4 | $8,008,440 | $8,409,000 | $8,809,560 | $11,144,093 | $14,699,059 |
5 | $7,252,200 | $7,614,480 | $7,977,240 | $10,107,163 | $13,402,098 |
6 | $6,586,800 | $6,916,080 | $7,245,720 | $9,187,573 | $12,256,222 |
7 | $6,012,960 | $6,313,800 | $6,614,160 | $8,399,983 | $11,264,377 |
8 | $5,508,600 | $5,784,120 | $6,059,520 | $7,707,709 | $10,389,992 |
9 | $5,063,520 | $5,316,960 | $5,570,040 | $7,096,231 | $9,615,393 |
10 | $4,810,320 | $5,050,800 | $5,291,160 | $6,746,229 | $9,188,364 |
11 | $4,569,840 | $4,798,440 | $5,027,040 | $6,770,882 | $9,132,437 |
12 | $4,341,480 | $4,558,680 | $4,775,760 | $6,580,997 | $9,055,452 |
13 | $4,124,280 | $4,330,680 | $4,536,840 | $6,483,144 | $8,966,188 |
14 | $3,918,360 | $4,114,200 | $4,310,280 | $6,383,525 | $8,879,483 |
15 | $3,722,040 | $3,908,160 | $4,094,280 | $6,276,531 | $8,774,590 |
16 | $3,536,180 | $3,712,920 | $3,889,920 | $5,967,137 | $8,383,827 |
17 | $3,359,160 | $3,527,160 | $3,695,160 | $5,675,766 | $8,014,182 |
18 | $3,191,400 | $3,350,760 | $3,510,480 | $5,399,118 | $7,661,348 |
19 | $3,047,640 | $3,199,920 | $3,352,680 | $5,163,127 | $7,362,619 |
20 | $2,925,600 | $3,071,880 | $3,217,920 | $4,962,033 | $7,110,593 |
21 | $2,808,600 | $2,949,120 | $3,089,640 | $4,921,797 | $7,092,309 |
22 | $2,696,400 | $2,831,160 | $2,965,920 | $4,878,938 | $7,064,702 |
23 | $2,588,640 | $2,718,240 | $2,847,240 | $4,831,766 | $7,030,220 |
24 | $2,420,400 | $2,609,400 | $2,733,720 | $4,781,276 | $6,990,226 |
25 | $2,385,480 | $2,504,640 | $2,624,280 | $4,726,328 | $6,942,976 |
26 | $2,306,520 | $2,421,720 | $2,537,040 | $4,574,283 | $6,751,642 |
27 | $2,239,920 | $2,352,000 | $2,464,200 | $4,445,417 | $6,592,553 |
28 | $2,226,000 | $2,337,720 | $2,448,840 | $4,420,156 | $6,586,032 |
29 | $2,210,040 | $2,320,440 | $2,431,080 | $4,388,099 | $6,582,149 |
30 | $2,193,960 | $2,303,520 | $2,413,560 | $4,356,476 | $6,534,714 |
Additionally, a franchise can send out as much as $6,363,000 from July 2022 to June 30, 2023. A team can also receive the same amount via trade, regardless of how much it sends out throughout the 2022-23 season.
Finally, the following teams paid luxury taxes for 2021-22
Team | Tax |
Golden State Warriors | $170,331,194 |
Brooklyn Nets | $97,711,261 |
Los Angeles Clippers | $83,114,692 |
Milwaukee Bucks | $52,037,160 |
Los Angeles Lakers | $45,117,195 |
Utah Jazz | $18,833,260 |
Philadelphia 76ers | $13,876,624 |
Total | $481,021,386 |
The 23 teams below the tax will receive $10,456,987 each while the league will get the remaining $240,510,693 to help fund revenue sharing for the 2021-22 season.
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