Pistons trade machine
Pistons 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. That includes the part most trade machines miss: the Pistons are already hard-capped at $209.0M for the season (John Collins sign-and-trade).
What the Pistons can still do
Figures come from the current 2026 offseason feed; exceptions already spent in the feed stay spent.
Biggest Pistons salaries, 2026-27
Common questions
Can the Pistons use the mid-level exception?
Yes — $15.0M of the non-taxpayer MLE fits under their ceiling (hard-capped by John Collins sign-and-trade).
Can the Pistons 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 Pistons hard-capped?
Yes — at the first apron ($209.0M) for the rest of the season, triggered by John Collins sign-and-trade. Later moves are checked against that line.
Can the Pistons trade a first-round pick?
Yes — they control their own future firsts, subject to the Stepien rule's ban on trading firsts in consecutive future drafts.