Paul George may have already given the Celtics a little breathing room before he’s even played a game in Boston.
According to ESPN’s Bobby Marks, George waived his $3.9 million trade kicker to join the Celtics, a move that immediately changes the team’s financial picture. His cap hit in Boston remains at $54.1 million and $56.6 million, but the waived bonus still matters for a team trying to thread a very narrow tax needle.
That matters because Boston was already sitting in a tight spot after the reported signings of Mitchell Robinson and Mike Conley. The Celtics were listed at $3.5 million above the luxury tax line, and George’s decision gets them much closer to that threshold. Keith Smith reported Boston was about $571,000 over the tax with 15 players on standard deals, while also noting the Celtics are about $8 million under their first-apron hard cap.
The cleanest path out of the tax is straightforward: waive Dalano Banton’s non-guaranteed $2.8 million salary.
That financial maneuvering is not just about saving money in the short term. If Boston gets below the $200.4 million luxury-tax line this season, it would reset its repeater tax penalties. That reset requires two straight seasons of staying out of overspending territory.
The repeater rates for 2026-27 are steep enough to make every dollar count. For teams in the 0-100 percent tax bracket range, the rate is $3 for every $1 over. It climbs to $3.25 for the next tier, then $5.50, and eventually $6.75 plus $0.50 for each additional 100 percent once a team gets to $204.4 million or more.
Right now, Boston would be paying $3 for every $1 it spends over the tax line. That is still a serious bill, even if it is not as punishing as the rates the Celtics faced two seasons ago.
If ownership can reset the tax, it gives the franchise more flexibility to spend aggressively later. The team would then have three above-tax seasons before the penalties kick back in.
George’s willingness to help on the financial side also raises a bigger question: does it stop there?
The 36-year-old has a $56 million player option for the 2027-28 season. The most likely outcome is that he takes it and locks in the money. But there is at least an outside possibility that he could opt out and return on a more team-friendly deal for Boston.
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