NBA Draft Contracts By Pick: The Rookie Scale Breakdown Every Fan Should Know

NBA rookie deals explained: Top picks earn generational wealth, while draft slots impact millions in salary.

NBA Draft Contracts By Pick: The Rookie Scale Breakdown Every Fan Should Know
2026 NBA Draft - Player Availability
Source: Caleb Bowlin / Getty

The 2026 NBA Draft is finally here, and for 60 young hoopers, tonight could be the moment everything changes. This year’s class comes with real star power at the top, led by BYU wing AJ Dybantsa, Kansas guard Darryn Peterson, Duke forward Cameron Boozer and North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson — a group widely viewed as the clear top tier of the 2026 draft. Dybantsa has been the favorite to go No. 1, while Peterson, Boozer and Wilson all bring the kind of upside that makes front offices dream big and fans start talking themselves into the future before Summer League even tips off.

2026 NBA Draft - Darryn Peterson
Source: Caleb Bowlin / Getty

That’s what makes draft night so special. For teams, it’s a chance to reset, rebuild, add a missing piece, or find the next face of the franchise. For the players, it’s the payoff after years of AAU gyms, college spotlights, NIL pressure, scouting reports and mock draft debates. But while the jersey, hat and handshake with Adam Silver get most of the attention, there’s another life-changing part of hearing your name called: the contract that comes with it.

Here are the 2026 NBA Draft contracts by pick number, explained.

In the NBA, first-round picks don’t negotiate rookie deals from scratch the way veterans do. They fall under the league’s rookie scale, which assigns a salary slot to every first-round pick. The higher a player gets drafted, the more money that slot is worth. First-round picks can technically sign for as little as 80% or as much as 120% of the scale, but in today’s NBA, most first-rounders sign at the full 120% number. Rookie-scale deals are four-year contracts, with the first two years guaranteed and the third and fourth controlled by team options.

2026 NBA Draft Player
Source: Caleb Bowlin / Getty

That means the gap between picks can be massive. According to Forbes, this year’s No. 1 pick is projected to land the richest rookie contract ever, tipping the $68 million deal Glenn Robinson signed before the rookie scale era. Front Office Sports also estimated that the No. 1 pick in this draft will make about $67 million over four years. So whether that player ends up being Dybantsa, Peterson or a surprise name at the top, the first pick is walking into generational money before playing a single NBA minute.

The money drops with each pick, but it is still life-changing throughout the first round. Last season’s rookie scale, for example, had the No. 1 pick at about $62.7 million over four years at the 120% number, the No. 5 pick at about $41.2 million, the No. 10 pick at about $27.4 million and the No. 30 pick at about $14.1 million. That gives fans a good idea of how the ladder works: every slot matters, and sliding even a few picks can cost a player millions.

NBA
Source: Caleb Bowlin / Getty

That’s why draft night is bigger than just fit, upside and highlight tapes. The team that calls a player’s name is investing in his future, but it’s also changing his family’s financial reality overnight. For fans, understanding the rookie scale adds another layer to the drama. When a prospect rises, falls, gets traded or sneaks into the first round, it isn’t just about basketball opportunity — it’s about guaranteed money, long-term security and the first real step into NBA life.

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