New story with @TimBontemps: Leading up to the Cavs’ game in L.A. against the Lakers tonight, ESPN canvassed sources throughout the NBA to get a sense of what the league thinks LeBron James will do after this season https://t.co/HVeCj7zsU0— Dave McMenamin (@mcten) March 31, 2026
FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
The story of where LeBron James will play basketball for the 2026-27 season — if he plays at all — began last June 29, when his longtime agent, Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul, told ESPN’s Shams Charania that James would exercise his player option for 2025-26 with the Los Angeles Lakers.
“LeBron wants to compete for a championship,” Paul told Charania at the time. “He knows the Lakers are building for the future. He understands that, but he values a realistic chance of winning it all.”
By opting in to his contract, James did something he had never done during his 23-year career: set himself up to be a free agent without a fallback option. It signaled the uncertainty over whether this would be his final NBA season or potentially just his final one in a Lakers uniform.
Paul’s announcement sparked immediate speculation about James’ future and has remained a water-cooler conversation topic in NBA circles for months. It will only get louder Tuesday, when James and the Lakers host his former team, the Cleveland Cavaliers. It won’t stop until he hits free agency this summer — or he announces his retirement.
Here is a look at the factors league insiders believe James will weigh in his decision — and the teams that could emerge as options this summer — culled from conversations ESPN has had with more than a dozen sources across the NBA in recent weeks.
Jump to a section:
Will LeBron play in 2026-27?
What would a deal look like?
Will LeBron decide to keep playing?
At 41, James is already the league’s oldest player and has passed Vince Carter for the most seasons played, eclipsed Robert Parish for the most games played and long ago put Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in the rearview for the most points scored in NBA history.
Since last offseason, James has dealt with sciatica, which disrupted and delayed the start of his 2025-26 campaign. And after all the rehab he endured to make it back, his days have been filled with the preparation, maintenance and recovery needed to play on a nightly basis.
After giving signals earlier this season that this could be his last go-round — including shouting out road cities on Instagram after playing what could be his final games there — he distanced himself from retirement talk during All-Star Weekend. Had he leaned into it, the event could have taken on a different tone to celebrate James. Instead, he was just another veteran on the USA Stripes team trying to fend off the up-and-coming challengers on USA Stars and the World team.
“When I know, you guys will know,” James said when asked about his plans. “I don’t know. I have no idea. I just want to live, that’s all.”
Since then, life has become easier for James with the Lakers. After a post-holidays funk dropped them to No. 6 in the West, they’re solidly in the No. 3 spot with fewer than 10 games remaining. He shared court time with his son, Bronny, in meaningful minutes in Indiana last week to cap off a 5-1 road trip. And rather than dropping retirement hints on social media, James has been spamming recent IG stories with slides showing off the exploits of his Lakers teammates.
With the way James’ body is holding up and his unmistakably renewed spirit during the hot streak, it is hard to imagine him thinking he cannot play beyond this summer. The question is: With the rigors an NBA season brings, will he want to at 42?
How much money will he expect to be paid?
In talking to sources about what James might do, conversations often focused on how much money he would be willing to play for after two decades of making the maximum or close to it.
“Will he play for the midlevel exception? For the minimum?” one scout asked. “A big part of this is knowing what he will be willing to do [financially].”
That doesn’t account for the possibility of returning to the Lakers, who will have James’ Bird rights and the ability to pay him up to the max for next season. They are hoping to remake the roster around Luka Doncic, however, and must factor in Austin Reaves’ upcoming unrestricted free agency.
If James chooses to go elsewhere, signing for the minimum will put him in play for any franchise and won’t force any roster maneuvers to fit him in the salary cap. Signing for the full midlevel exception (roughly $15 million) or agreeing to a sign-and-trade could force teams to duck below the first luxury tax apron to add him.
Another factor to consider: time. Whether James chooses to remain a Laker or play elsewhere, a key component is when he makes his decision. Will it be whenever the Lakers’ season ends? Before free agency opens June 30? In August, after he has given his body time to tell him whether it is able to handle another season? The longer he waits, the fewer options there will be as teams fill out their rosters throughout the summer.
Of course, the “when” is nowhere near as intriguing as the “where.”
LeBron’s top options this offseason
Lakers
When James returned to the Lakers lineup March 12 against the Chicago Bulls after missing L.A.’s previous three games with left foot, left elbow and right hip ailments, the team he was rejoining had changed.
The previously inconsistent Lakers had found a groove, going 3-0 against the Indiana Pacers, New York Knicks and Minnesota Timberwolves with Doncic averaging 36.7 points per game and Reaves averaging 25.0.
The Lakers’ performance was in stark contrast to the previous couple of weeks when James had been in the lineup. His 19.0 points on 51.8% shooting, 6.8 assists and 4.9 rebounds during an eight-game stretch far exceeded the output of any other player this late into his career, but L.A. went only 4-4 when it was supposed to be making its post-All-Star push.
The fact that his absence coincided with the Lakers’ ascent sparked a national conversation about James’ fit on the team. One L.A. sports talk station even ran a segment wondering whether James — the NBA’s leading career scorer and an All-Star this season — should come off the bench.
Whatever outside noise was swirling, it didn’t penetrate James’ psyche inside the locker room at Crypto.com Arena ahead of tipoff against Chicago. With his gold No. 23 Lakers jersey hanging behind him, James danced in front of his locker and sang along as Michael Jackson’s “Remember the Time” piped through the speakers.
“Those sweet memories … will always be dear to me …”
Whether intended as a wistful playlist or not, the lyrics served as a reminder of how little time there could be left in James’ career. And as James shifted from dancing to digging through a duffel bag filled with 15 colorways of his signature sneakers to choose which pair to wear for the night, that simple decision served as a reminder of the major one he’ll make this summer.
And, as ESPN reported last month, if James decides Los Angeles is where he wants to play his 24th NBA season, the Lakers would welcome him back. President of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka’s declaration before the season that he would love it if James retires a Laker was meant to reflect a 2026 or 2027 retirement, sources told ESPN.
After an up-and-down opening stretch of the season — when James was first sidelined with the back issues and then he, Doncic and Reaves struggled to mesh — the team has taken off recently with James being willing to settle into a role as the team’s third scoring option.
“To their credit, and to his credit, [LeBron is] playing the right way,” a Western Conference scout said. “He’s a basketball savant, and he’s figuring out how to fill in the gaps, and they are unstoppable right now.”
L.A. will have close to $50 million in projected cap space this summer with James’ $52.6 million and Rui Hachimura’s $18.3 million salaries off the books, assuming both Deandre Ayton ($8.1 million) and Marcus Smart ($5.4 million) pick up their player options.
The Lakers aren’t expected to take that $50 million and give it to another star instead of James. They have interest in re-signing Reaves, Jaxson Hayes and Luke Kennard, team sources told ESPN, not to mention Hachimura, if the price is right. Reaves will decline a $14.9 million player option and enter unrestricted free agency, sources familiar with his plans told ESPN.
He will have a $20.9 million free agent cap hold, according to ESPN’s Bobby Marks, which will leave Los Angeles at that $50 million cap space number no matter how close Reaves’ new deal comes to the five-year, $241 million max contract he is eligible to sign.
It remains to be seen how much of a pay cut James might be willing to take after commanding max contracts for years. On several occasions this season, James has groused to reporters that he doesn’t publicly admonish the officiating anymore because he doesn’t want to be fined when he won’t have many more NBA checks coming in.
His wife, Savannah, and 11-year-old daughter, Zhuri, live with him in his recently renovated Brentwood estate. Bronny has a partially guaranteed contract with the Lakers next season. And his other son, Bryce, plays basketball at the University of Arizona, a short flight away. The offices for Klutch Sports and Uninterrupted, run by his close friends and business partners, Rich Paul and Maverick Carter, are in Los Angeles.
Another motivator, mentioned to ESPN by several league sources when asked to assess James’ situation, can’t be overlooked: It’s hard to beat Southern California’s year-round climate and golf courses to fuel his growing obsession.
LeBron is coming back on a new 2-year contract for $20M next season and $15M for the second year.