Hoops Rumors Glossary: Trade Kickers (2024)

December 27th 2018 at 10:13am CST by Luke Adams

While the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement limits the flexibility teams have to sweeten their offers to free agents, one tool clubs have at their disposal is a trade kicker. Also known as trade bonuses, trade kickers represent extra cash a player can receive if his team trades him, and are often written into contracts for major free agent signings or extensions.

Hoops Rumors Glossary: Trade Kickers (1)Trade kickers can be represented in a fixed dollar amount or a percentage, or a combination of the two. For example, Kelly Olynyk‘s current contract with the Heat calls for a trade kicker worth the lesser amount of $2MM or 5% of his remaining salary.

Trade bonuses can’t exceed 15% of the player’s remaining salary. However, many of them are worth that maximum allowable amount. Currently, 18 of the 23 players with trade kickers have ones worth 15%.

[RELATED: NBA Players With Trade Kickers In 2018/19]

If a player with a 15% trade kicker has $10MM left on his contract and is traded, his bonus would be worth $1.5MM — 15% of $10MM. But the value of a trade kicker declines each passing day during the regular season, since the amount the player receives for the current year of his deal is prorated.

Here’s an example: Milos Teodosic is in the final year of his contract with the Clippers, earning a $6,300,000 salary with a 15% trade kicker. Technically, 15% of $6.3MM is $945K. However, 72 days of the 177-day regular season have already passed, so if Teodosic were traded today, his trade kicker would only apply to the 105 days remaining on his contract. He’ll make $3,737,288 during that stretch, so his 15% trade kicker would result in a bonus worth approximately $561K.

A trade kicker is paid by the team trading the player, and can only be paid out once during the player’s contract. For instance, Jeremy Lin had a trade bonus worth 10%, which he received when the Nets sent him to Atlanta during the 2018 offseason. If Lin is traded again by the Hawks, he wouldn’t get another trade bonus.

A pair of rules related to trade kickers have created some confusion about how the NBA would handle John Wall‘s 15% trade kicker if he’s traded this season. Those two rules are as follows:

  • A player can’t receive his full trade bonus if it would take him over his maximum allowable salary. Stephen Curry, Gordon Hayward, and LeBron James are among the players currently earning max salaries who have 15% trade kickers — those bonuses would be voided if any of those players were traded this season.
    • Note: A player can receive a portion of his trade bonus if his salary is worth less than the max and his bonus would take him over his max. This happened last season with Blake Griffin, whose partial bonus increased his salary to his max.
  • For cap purposes, a trade bonus is spread out over the remaining non-option years on a player’s contract. The exact dispersion depends on what percentage of each season’s salary is fully guaranteed. In basic terms though, if a player with a $3MM trade kicker has two guaranteed years left on his deal, $1.5MM would be applied to each season’s cap hit.
    • Note: In that same scenario, if a player’s second season was only 50% guaranteed, $2MM of his trade kicker would be applied to the first year and $1MM to the second year, to reflect the guarantee proportions. If the player’s second season was non-guaranteed, the full $3MM bonus would hit the cap in year one.

In Wall’s case, because he signed a super-max extension that goes into effect in 2019/20, he still has more than $180MM left on his contract, meaning a 15% trade bonus would be worth nearly $30MM. His salary for the 2018/19 season ($19,169,800) is well below his allowable maximum, so he should be eligible to receive that bonus. However, spreading the cap hits across five seasons would push his future salaries well above the max for those seasons, which isn’t allowed. It’s not clear how the NBA would handle that bonus if Wall is traded this season, since that specific situation has never arisen before.

A trade kicker can sometimes complicate salary matching in trades. Although the team trading away the player with the kicker pays the bonus money, that team still only counts the players’ original salary for matching purposes. However, the team acquiring the player must count his new cap figure for matching purposes.

For example, let’s say a player with three years and $30MM left on his contract ($10MM annual cap hits) has a 15% trade kicker. His bonus would work out to $4.5MM, which would be spread out across three seasons, adding $1.5MM to his current-year cap hit. The team acquiring him would view him as an $11.5MM player, while the team trading him would consider him a $10MM player. In some cases, that discrepancy can prevent a deal from working for one side from a salary-matching perspective.

In that scenario, the player is permitted to waive his trade bonus, clearing the way for a deal to work, but he’s under no obligation to do so. A player can waive his trade bonus for any other reason too, if he so chooses.

Here are several other rules related to trade kickers:

  • Player and team options aren’t taken into account when calculating trade bonuses, but early termination options are.
  • Only the base value of a contract is taken into account when calculating trade bonuses. Incentives aren’t considered.
  • Trade kickers can technically be included in rookie contracts, but a player on a rookie deal can’t exceed 120% of his rookie scale amount via a trade bonus, so this is extremely rare.
  • A minimum salary contract can include a trade bonus. If the bonus vests, the contract is no longer considered to be a minimum salary deal.
  • If a player signs an extension, a trade bonus can be added to or removed from his contract.

Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ was used in the creation of this post.

An earlier versions of this post was published in 2013 by Chuck Myron.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Hoops Rumors Glossary: Trade Kickers (2024)

FAQs

Hoops Rumors Glossary: Trade Kickers? ›

A trade kicker is paid by the team trading the player, and can only be paid out once during the player's contract.

What is a trade kicker in basketball? ›

Trade Kicker The percentage of a player's salary that is awarded as a bonus in the event of a trade. Trade Incoming The amount of salary incoming in a trade; used to determine whether or not a trade is legal. Trade Outgoing The amount of salary outgoing in a trade; used to determine whether or not a trade is legal.

What does 15% trade kicker mean? ›

Another type of bonus is a trade kicker, where players earn extra money if traded during the duration of their contract. They can be negotiated into a veteran contract or extension for up to 15 percent of the player's remaining base contract.

What is Jaylen Brown's trade kicker? ›

Instead, they settled on a trade kicker. A trade kicker (officially called a trade bonus) is a stipulation in a contract that increases a player's salary if he is traded. High-caliber players like to have them because it makes them harder to move, and compensates them more if they are.

What are trades in basketball? ›

NBA trades involve teams exchanging players, draft picks, or cash considerations to improve their rosters or financial flexibility.

Who pays the trade kicker? ›

A trade kicker is actually paid by the team trading him, not the team that receives him. The maximum trade kicker allowed is 15%. For Harrison Barnes, this would mean that if he is traded, he would receive a 15% bonus of the worth of the remainder of his contract - from the Kings.

Has anyone ever traded for a kicker? ›

On Monday, the Browns traded for kicker Dustin Hopkins from the Chargers.

Do trade kickers count against the cap? ›

A trade kicker can sometimes complicate salary matching in trades. Although the team trading away the player with the kicker pays the bonus money, that team still only counts the players' original salary for matching purposes. However, the team acquiring the player must count his new cap figure for matching purposes.

Who is fully guaranteed with a trade kicker no player option? ›

BREAKING: Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown has agreed to a five-year, $304 million supermax contract extension with the franchise, per sources. This is the richest deal in NBA history, negotiated by agent Jason Glushon. Fully guaranteed, with a trade kicker. No player option.

What is the salary of a kicker? ›

With a minimum salary of $750,000 (£594,420) this year, NFL's kickers and punters can earn a decent living. Here are the 10 highest-paid kickers in the league from the 2023 season: Justin Tucker, Baltimore Ravens: $6m (4 years, $24m) Matt Gay, Indianapolis Colts: $5.62m (4 years, $22.5m)

What is Jayson Tatum's salary? ›

Jayson Tatum signed a 5 year , $163,000,300 contract with the Boston Celtics, including $163,000,300 guaranteed, and an average annual salary of $32,600,060. In 2024-25, Tatum will earn a base salary of $34,848,340, while carrying a cap hit of $34,848,340 and a dead cap value of $34,848,340.

Did Celtics offer Jaylen Brown? ›

The Boston Celtics finished their biggest remaining piece of business by agreeing with Jaylen Brown on a five-year, $304 million contract extension on Tuesday that will take over temporarily as the biggest contract in NBA history.

What happens if Jaylen Brown makes All-NBA? ›

Brown was voted onto the All-NBA Second Team, making him eligible for a five-year, $295 million supermax extension this summer. Boston will offer it. Brown will sign it. Here's what an executive from another team told Sean Deveney of Heavy.com about Brown in the last 24 hours.

What sport has the most trades? ›

Why are there more trades made in the National basketball Association (NBA) than in other professional sports leagues such as the National Hockey League (NHL), Major League Baseball (MLB), and National Football League (NFL)? Trades happen all the time in every sport.

Do NBA trades involve money? ›

NBA teams can include cash as part of a trade but are limited to $7,005,000 for all transactions during the 2023-24 season. That's two separate figures representing what teams can take in and what they can send out.

Who approves NBA trades? ›

(Note: A trade is considered official once the NBA has approved the agreement. Teams will announce the deal when it's official.) When can teams begin trading again?

Does a trade kicker count against the cap? ›

A trade kicker can sometimes complicate salary matching in trades. Although the team trading away the player with the kicker pays the bonus money, that team still only counts the players' original salary for matching purposes. However, the team acquiring the player must count his new cap figure for matching purposes.

What is a trade exception in basketball? ›

A vital tool within the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement is the trade exception. While it come in many flavors, allowing teams to take back salary in return for outgoing players, the Standard Traded Player Exception (STPE) is the type that lasts a full calendar year.

Can a player refuse a trade in NBA? ›

In the NBA, there are limited instances where players have the right to veto trades. The most common is the No Trade Clause, which players with eight years of service can qualify for with teams they've been on for at least four seasons. Bradley Beal is the only player in the league who currently has one.

How much salary do you match for NBA trade? ›

200% of the outgoing salary (plus $250K), for any amount up to $7,500,000. The outgoing salary plus $7.5MM, for any amount between $7,500,001 and $29,000,000. 125% of the outgoing salary (plus $250K), for any amount above $29,000,000.

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