10 NBA Stars Who Will Be Free Agents in 2026 (And Where They Might Go)
The 2026 NBA offseason may not match the star power of past free agency classes, but there’s enough intrigue to keep fans glued to their phones. Some names will sign extensions before anyone can blink. Others are genuine wildcards who hope they’re formidable enough to turn struggling teams into contenders. The new CBA has made players more likely to stay put, but money talks, situations change, and players sometimes love a fresh start.
LeBron James

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At 41, LeBron is playing on a one-year contract for the first time since joining the Lakers. He averaged 24.4 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 8.2 assists last season on 51.3% shooting. While he still wants ring number five, the Lakers are building around Luka Doncic. Cleveland is a logical destination, especially if LeBron wants a final homecoming tour and eyes potential teammates like Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley.
Khris Middleton

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Everyone who has watched the NBA for some time remembers Giannis and Khris Middleton’s collaboration in delivering Milwaukee its first title in 50 years. As he plays his final season under his contract with the Washington Wizards, he’s set for free agency in 2026. Dallas would be a great fit as Luka Dončić loves bright wings who can punish help defense. Miami could also be on the list if it still values shot-making and toughness.
Zach LaVine

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Zach LaVine has a player option, which makes him a potential free agent. If Sacramento can’t build a winner despite having names like Westbrook and DeRozan, opting out and chasing a new challenge makes sense. The Magic fit because they need perimeter shot creation and late-clock scoring. The Heat are another potential suitor because they always want another attacker. Either way, his market depends on his ability to stay healthy.
James Harden

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The Orlando Magic have talent, but they need someone to run the offense when the defense intensifies. James would help immediately because he turns half-court possessions into free throws, layups, or open threes. With him on the roster, young forwards would focus on scoring and defending. His player-option path keeps 2026 in play, and Orlando has the roster profile that benefits from a control-tower guard.
Draymond Green

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If Sacramento wants a playoff identity, it needs more defensive organization than vibes. Draymond Green would help fix that instantly. Golden State has ranked high in total rebounds on the team stats board, and Draymond’s style is part of that physical edge. Put him next to scoring guards, and he becomes the Kings’ missing piece on defense. The key factor is whether he declines his $27.68 million player option for the 2026-27 season.
Kristaps Porziņģis

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The Pacers play fast and score, but rim protection has been a recurring issue for teams like this. Kristaps fixes that without clogging the floor. He’s also the rare player who can defend the paint and still stretch defenses to the arc, which matters in the playoffs. If Indiana wants to level up defensively without sacrificing offense, KP6 is that fine line between both worlds, and his contract timing keeps 2026 interesting.
CJ McCollum

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San Antonio’s long-term plan revolves around Victor Wembanyama, but every young star needs a seasoned shot-maker next to him. CJ thrives as a controlled scorer who can punish switches. Washington gave him up to Atlanta in the Trae trade, and he’s about to hit free agency after the season. The one-time NBA Most Improved Player would thrive in a young team that needs a grown-up guard, where he can bring structure to their guard room.
Russell Westbrook

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While his triple-double haul makes headlines, Russell also offers pace and rim pressure. He helps teams that struggle to generate easy looks. He had 15 points and 10 assists in 2026, as the Kings defeated Durant and the Rockets, which is the exact “bench engine” role he plays to perfection. Chicago has frequently needed a tempo jolt, and Russell is a perfect fit to inject that energy and play volume.
Tobias Harris

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Denver doesn’t need another superstar besides Jokic. They need the right forward for bigger, more physical matchups. Tobias offers size, shooting, and stability, and he won’t derail chemistry. The Nuggets rank high in three-point percentage in 2026 team stats, which means they can afford a forward who plays within the system instead of hijacking it.
Nikola Vučević

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Nikola Vučević fixes problems teams do not like to admit. Golden State finished in the bottom third of the league in defensive rebounding. The Montenegrin averaged double-digit rebounds again last season. He also shot above 34 percent from three, which can give opponents another shooter to guard besides Steph Curry.