New York Knicks
Season2026-272027-282028-292029-302030-31
Their apron payroll (contracts, dead money, and unlikely incentives) is $213.4M, against a first apron of $223.6M and a second apron of $237.5M (projected).
Staying under the aprons preserves the full toolkit: the full mid-level, the bi-annual exception, and sign-and-trade flexibility. Several of those tools hard-cap a team at an apron once used, which is why the margins matter.
This is a forward look at 2027-28: it counts the contracts, options, and cap holds already on the Knicks books for that season. Signings, trades, and option decisions between now and then will move these numbers.
The rule behind this
The first apron is a spending line a few million above the luxury tax. Crossing it costs a team roster-building tools rather than just money: no acquiring players via sign-and-trade, no full mid-level exception (only the smaller taxpayer MLE), no bi-annual exception, no signing buyout players who earned more than the MLE, and trades must return salary within 110% of what goes out.
More Knicks questions
Numbers come straight from the live Knicks cap sheet, recomputed whenever the data updates.