LeBron James is chasing his record 24th NBA season, and the Lakers are the only realistic landing spot. ESPN’s Brian Windhorst confirmed Tuesday that both sides are already in active contract talks. Twenty-four hours later, ESPN’s Marc Spears said James is “likely coming back” to Los Angeles. Cleveland’s window to run it back with the King closed before it ever opened.
LeBron James and the Lakers Are Already Negotiating
James’ two-year, $101 million contract expired when the Knicks won the 2026 NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs, making him an unrestricted free agent for the third time in his career. The Lakers have until June 30, when free agency officially opens, to negotiate exclusively with him before every other team gets access.
Windhorst was clear about where things stand. “I think LeBron’s intention is to play,” he said on ESPN Cleveland Tuesday. “I think the focus right now is making a deal with the Lakers. Right now he’s allowed to negotiate with the Lakers and I believe they are negotiating. I believe they’re going back and forth. Free agency begins in 14 days, and in the next 14 days, I think he’s going to try to make a deal with the Lakers.”
Spears backed that read on Wednesday’s NBA Today, adding that former Cavaliers teammate Kevin Love “could likely be joining the Lakers, too.” James and Love were photographed together in London last week celebrating the 10-year anniversary of Cleveland’s 2016 championship, and now both men are expected to reunite in Los Angeles instead.
The Contract Standoff: LeBron Wants the Max, Lakers Want a Discount
This is where negotiations get complicated. According to NBC Sports’ Kurt Helin, James and his agent Rich Paul are going into talks asking for a maximum contract. They also want to know exactly how Rob Pelinka plans to spend money if he’s offering less. That’s not a soft position. That’s leverage.
James averaged 20.9 points, 7.2 assists, 6.1 rebounds, and 1.2 steals per game last season on 51.5% shooting. He made his 20th consecutive All-Star team at 41. When Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves both missed significant time before the playoffs, James reverted to primary ball-handler and carried the Lakers’ offense entirely on basketball IQ alone.
Colin Cowherd framed the dilemma from the Lakers’ side on Tuesday: Last year he gave you 21 points, 7 assists, and 6.5 rebounds. There are like four guys in the NBA that did that.” Then Cowherd delivered the blunt reality the front office is wrestling with: “There are no great options for the Lakers.”
Pelinka is building around Luka Doncic. He also needs to re-sign Austin Reaves at approximately $40 million per year and address a center position that could lose Jaxson Hayes in free agency. Paying James close to a max number shrinks every other lever Pelinka has to pull. Offering him significantly less risks losing him before free agency even starts, handing a motivated 41-year-old to a rival.
| Stat | 2025–26 Regular Season | 2025–26 Playoffs | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Points | 20.9 | 23.2 | ESPN / Yahoo Sports |
| Assists | 7.2 | 7.3 | ESPN / Yahoo Sports |
| Rebounds | 6.1 | 6.7 | ESPN / Yahoo Sports |
| Games Played | 60 | — | ESPN / Yahoo Sports |
| FG% | 51.5% | 45.8% | ESPN / Yahoo Sports |
| 2025–26 Cap Hit | $52.6M player option | Bleacher Report | |
Why Cleveland Was Never a Realistic Option
This spring, the eventual champion Knicks swept the Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals. On pure basketball logic, adding the NBA’s most decorated active player would resolve real problems. The finances make it a non-starter.
Cleveland is currently operating over the second apron, the NBA’s harshest salary threshold, which blocks teams from using the mid-level exception, signing players via sign-and-trade, and aggregating salaries in trades. The only number they could legally offer James is the $3.9 million veteran minimum. That conversation doesn’t happen.
The more profound issue is the Bird rights structure. The Lakers hold James’ full Bird rights, built up over eight seasons together, which means they can exceed the salary cap to re-sign him and offer any dollar figure they choose. No other team has that flexibility with James. Cleveland would need to clear massive salaries by trading Dennis Schroder, Max Strus, or both, just to get into the same area code financially, and even then they’d be offering fractions of what Los Angeles can put on the table.
Windhorst acknowledged the Cavaliers only become relevant in one specific scenario. “If, in 14 days, he is at an impasse with the Lakers, and there is no deal there, then I think other teams, like the Cavs, should be ready to act,” he said. “But the league generally believes the two sides are going to come together.”
The Golden State Warriors are also circling. James and Stephen Curry spent the better part of a decade as rivals across four NBA Finals matchups. A Warriors run at James would make for a compelling storyline, but Windhorst doesn’t view Golden State as a realistic threat financially, and the Warriors’ path back to contention is murkier than either Cleveland’s or Los Angeles’.
What Comes Next Before the June 30 Deadline
James has been vacationing in Europe. Rich Paul has not yet formally sat down with his client to map out a strategy, per LakersNation. That tells you something about the urgency. When your most realistic destination is already in negotiations, there’s no fire drill.
The structure of any deal will likely reflect Pelinka’s other roster priorities. NBC Sports floated a two-year framework, approximately $50 million, with a player option in the second year and a no-trade clause. That’s a significant pay cut from his $52.6 million player option this past season, but it gives James control over his exit timeline, keeps him in the Bronny situation, and preserves his standing inside a franchise he’s spent eight years building.
In eight seasons with the Lakers, James has appeared in more than 500 games across the regular season and playoffs, averaging 25.9 points, 7.7 rebounds, and 7.9 assists per game. He passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to become the NBA’s all-time leading scorer while wearing a Lakers uniform. Walking away from that doesn’t happen over a contract dispute, not when the alternative is $3.9 million in Cleveland.
Free agency opens June 30. The Lakers have 12 days to get the deal done before James can take calls from anyone else. Every signal points toward a deal finishing inside that window. LeBron James’s free agency in 2026 is shaping up to be the shortest drama in a career built entirely on dramatic moments.
