Over the Apron
DAL

Mavericks trade machine

$180,213,090 committedOver cap

Mavericks trades here are checked against the modeled 2023 CBA rules — salary matching, apron limits, hard caps, and pick rules — starting from the current 2026 offseason data, not a blank slate.

What the Mavericks can still do

Non-Tax MLEup to $15.0M
Bi-Annualup to $5.5M
Minimumup to $3.9M
Anthony Davis TPEabsorbs $20.8M
Jaden Hardy TPEabsorbs $2.9M
Dante Exum TPEabsorbs $2.3M

Figures come from the current 2026 offseason feed; exceptions already spent in the feed stay spent.

Biggest Mavericks salaries, 2026-27

Kyrie Irving$39.5M
P.J. Washington$19.8M
Klay Thompson$17.5M
Daniel Gafford$17.3M
Santi Aldama$17.0M
Cooper Flagg$14.5M
Caleb Martin$10.0M
Naji Marshall$9.4M

Common questions

Can the Mavericks use the mid-level exception?

Yes — $15.0M of the non-taxpayer MLE fits under their ceiling, though using it hard-caps them at the first apron.

Can the Mavericks aggregate salaries in a trade?

Yes — they're below the second apron, so they can combine outgoing contracts to match a bigger incoming salary.

Are the Mavericks hard-capped?

Not yet — but using the full MLE, the BAE, expanded matching, a sign-and-trade acquisition, or signing a waived player whose prior contract topped the mid-level would freeze the first apron ($209.0M) as their ceiling; the taxpayer mid-level, combining salaries in a trade, or sending cash can freeze the second apron.

Can the Mavericks trade a first-round pick?

Carefully — they already owe 4 future firsts, and the Stepien rule bars leaving consecutive future drafts uncovered. The board tracks the current obligations and names the pick that would break the rule.

Other teams