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June 13, 2026

Sixers officially allowed to negotiate new contracts with nine pending free agents

For now, the Sixers can exclusively negotiate with their soon-to-be free agents. On June 30, the rest of the NBA can get involved.

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Oubre 6.6.26 Colleen Claggett/for PhillyVoice

Kelly Oubre Jr. has spent three years playing for the Sixers on short-term commitments. Could he return on a long-term deal?

With the 2026 NBA Finals complete and the New York Knicks finally atop the basketball world again, the Sixers – and the rest of the teams in the league – will have clearance to negotiate new contracts with their players on expiring contracts when the clock strikes midnight on Sunday. These exclusive negotiating windows will last until June 30, at which point all NBA teams are free to negotiate with free agents.

Players and teams coming to terms on new deals during this period has not been all that common since its inception in 2024, though it has happened occasionally over each of the last two offseasons.

The Sixers can negotiate new deals with their three players whose contracts contain team options for 2026-27 – they would have to decline any of those options to sign a deal with different terms – and the six players on expiring deals.

Breaking down all nine players now eligible to work out new contracts:

Quentin Grimes

Grimes was the Sixers' free-agency priority last summer, but did not sign a contract until October. He missed training camp and the first two games of the preseason due to a bitter stalemate which prompted his agent to publicly blast Sixers management, and prompted Grimes to seek new representation.

With no market due to a lack of cap space in the NBA last summer, Grimes accepted his $8.7 million qualifying offer. Instead of securing a significant long-term deal, he was forced to bet on himself, setting up a trip to unrestricted free agency shortly after turning 26 years old. He had an up-and-down season, with a particularly disappointing playoff run which only included a few standout moments.

Grimes is also a Full Bird free agent. The Jared McCain trade should improve his chances of sticking around pretty dramatically. But between his miserable experience with the Sixers last summer and the clear fact that he is blocked by Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe moving forward, perhaps Grimes will want out.

Kelly Oubre Jr.

Oubre, who will turn 31 years old in December, had arguably the best three-point shooting season of his NBA career in 2025-26, knocking down 36.0 percent of his long-range tries. That will help him as he tries to – finally – secure a long-term commitment from a team. Oubre has spent three years with the Sixers; in each one he has been a prospective free agent.

Oubre is now a Full Bird free agent, which means no restrictions exist as far as how much money the Sixers can pay him. What is the veteran swingman looking for this summer?

"Somewhere where I'm loved. Just somewhere where my family can be comfortable. I have a family now, so it's not like I'm thinking for myself and [wanting to be] able to do spontaneous stuff. I just want my kids to have somewhere that they can call home," Oubre said after the Sixers' season-ending loss on May 10. "I'm going to go out there, I'm going to grind, I'm going to put my hard hat on and go to work, but what I do is for my family. And I just want them to be able to just be stable somewhere and to not have to worry about anything when it comes to their lives being uprooted and figuring out things on the fly. I want my kids to grow in a stable environment in a place where they are wanted... I'm ready for whatever."


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Andre Drummond

It did not always seem like Drummond would make it through the entirety of his two-year, $10 million contract with the Sixers before being traded by the organization for the second time – but that he did. Drummond was not the Sixers' best backup center for the majority of the regular season, but he was early and late – particularly in the postseason, when youngster Adem Bona struggled.

Drummond, entering his age-33 season, is an Early Bird free agent. That means the Sixers can issue him a starting salary of up to $8,750,000 on what would have to be a contract of at least two years. It should not cost that much to retain his services, though; if Drummond does not sign for a veteran's minimum salary this summer he will not make much more than that.

Dominick Barlow (team option: $3,415,000)

Barlow was one of the true revelations of the 2025-26 season; in his age-22 season he went from signing a two-way contract to starting in 59 of his 71 appearances and cementing himself as a rotation-caliber big thanks to stellar offensive rebounding, defensive versatility and impressive feel.

When the Sixers signed Barlow to a standard contract in February, it gave him a considerable in-season raise and included this team option for 2026-27. The Sixers could follow the path they went down a year ago with Justin Edwards, whose own standard deal included a team option. The Sixers built that in for security, but ultimately executed their plan to decline the option and sign a long-term deal.

If the Sixers end up declining Barlow's option to lock him in for more years of cost-effective production, his 2026-27 salary could start at up to $4,098,000 with annual raises of up to five percent. A three-year deal with maximum raises would end up being worth just under $13 million; a four-year deal could be worth up to $17.6 million.

Barring something very much unforeseen, Barlow will be back with the Sixers next season. The question is whether he will be doing so as a soon-to-be free agent, or in the first year of a new long-term deal.

Trendon Watford (team option: $2,801,346)

Players whose team options are picked up can immediately be traded, and that is probably the most likely scenario in which Watford's option is accepted by the Sixers.

Otherwise, look for them to follow a path that they went down with Eric Gordon last year: Gordon had a player option for a five-percent raise above the previous season's veteran's minimum salary and declined the option to immediately re-up on a new, one-year minimum. Given the annual increases of the NBA's salary cap, this was mutually beneficial, saving the Sixers some money against the salary cap, luxury tax and aprons and earning Gordon more money.

If the Sixers decline Watford's option and then immediately sign him to another minimum contract, they will save around $350 thousand against the cap, tax and aprons. Watford will earn an extra $50 thousand or so. The only drawback for the Sixers: instead of immediately being trade-eligible, Watford would be locked into a roster spot until the middle of the season.

Ultimately, the Sixers should either use Watford's team option to facilitate a trade, decline the option and re-sign the point forward on another minimum pact or let him walk. Simply accepting the option to bring him back is the least sensible option in front of them.

Kyle Lowry

Most believe that Lowry, 40, is set to retire after an outstanding 20-year NBA career. At the end of the 2024-25 season, Lowry proclaimed that he wanted to spend one more year in the league, playing for his hometown team. He did that.

Lowry has been an incredibly valuable presence for the Sixers and their young players; his impact on Maxey has been particularly meaningful. If he reversed course and opted to spend another year as a glorified assistant coach, he would certainly do so on a veteran's minimum salary once again.


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Dalen Terry (team option: $2,584,539)

Terry only joined the standard roster in Philadelphia days before the season ended; he was an emergency signing after veteran guard Cam Payne suffered an injury that was going to sideline him for the foreseeable future. But Terry was absolutely well-liked in the locker room and at times impressed with his intensity as a perimeter defender.

Terry's team option is for a non-guaranteed salary, which means there is no downside to the Sixers accepting his option and potentially bringing him into training camp. If at some point they need to clear more space below an apron, Terry would then become an easy casualty.

Two years ago, the Sixers had a similar option on Jeff Dowtin Jr. and surprisingly declined the option, only to eventually bring Dowtin back on a two-way deal. With four years of service, though, Terry is no longer two-way eligible. 

MarJon Beauchamp

Beauchamp closed out the season as one of the Sixers' two-way players, but with four NBA seasons under his belt he is no longer eligible for a two-way deal.

It will be a challenge for Beauchamp to earn a standard contract with his lack of NBA production, but he should be a strong candidate for an Exhibit 10 contract, whether it is with the Sixers or another team. Those deals are non-guaranteed minimums which incentivize the player to stay with the team's affiliate in the G League should they get waived.

Tyrese Martin (restricted)

Martin also finished the season on a two-way deal, but because he only has three years of NBA service, he could end up being a two-way contract again next season.

If the Sixers want the Allentown native back in the fold as one of their three two-way players next season, they will likely be able to do so. Martin is a restricted free agent, which means the Sixers can match any offer sheet he signs with another team.

It is not out of the question that Martin fetches an inexpensive standard contract; he has a decent bit of experience with a somewhat compelling makeup. But it seems more likely that he will once again be working to earn a conversion from two-way contract to standard deal, which six players have done with the Sixers in just the last three years alone.


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