Bulls Rebuild Just Reached The Offseason Decision Fans Feared

As the Chicago Bulls gear up for free agency with substantial cap space, the front office is poised to make impactful moves to bolster their roster, keeping fans eagerly anticipating their next steps.

Bryson Graham and Tiago Splitter are stepping into the next phase of the Chicago Bulls’ offseason, and this one is all about how they use the room they created.

After a draft night that drew plenty of praise around the league, Chicago now turns to free agency with real money to spend for the first time in a while. That matters, even if the Bulls are clearly operating in rebuild mode and don’t look like a team about to make a splash for splash’s sake. The emphasis this season is expected to stay on development, not chasing a better spot in the East.

Still, the cap space is there, and it has to be deployed somewhere. That could mean a veteran to steady the young roster, a swing at a restricted free agent, or taking on salary as a landing spot in a larger deal.

Free agency opens at 5:00 p.m. CT on Tuesday, and the Bulls are expected to be active in some form.

The biggest development for Chicago’s finances came with the addition of Nic Claxton. The Bulls started the offseason with more cap room than any other team, then shifted the board by bringing in Claxton and his $23.3 million salary from the Brooklyn Nets in a three-team trade. Chicago gave up nothing in the deal and simply absorbed the contract into its cap space.

That leaves the Bulls with an estimated $33.0 million in maximum spending power, according to Cap Sheets. That number could dip closer to $31.0 million depending on what happens with Kam Jones, whose contract becomes guaranteed tonight. Chicago also has a room mid-level exception worth $9.4 million.

Around the league, the Bulls are still in a rare position. The Nets and Lakers are the only other teams expected to operate as cap space clubs. The Lakers are projected to have about $52.0 million after LeBron James announced he will not return, while the Nets should sit around $35.7 million.

Rumor-wise, Chicago hasn’t been tied to a flood of names, but a few have surfaced. Norman Powell has been the loudest connection, and the idea makes sense on paper: the Bulls have a very young roster and a clear need in the backcourt, while Powell is coming off the first All-Star appearance of his career. He’s 33, though, and any deal for him would likely come with a real price tag.

• Norman Powell has been connected to Chicago on multiple fronts over the last 24 hours.

• An Anfernee Simons return to Chicago was mentioned by The Stein Line, though there are a couple of other teams who are reportedly interested in the sharpshooter.

• Speaking of The Stein Line, they also reported that Jonathan Kuminga is expected to be on the Bulls' radar. The former Warriors wing was sent to Atlanta last season before they decided not to pick up his option for the 2026-27 campaign. Not a particularly strong shooter, however, his fit with this current Bulls roster would have some very skeptical.

Roster-wise, Chicago currently has two open spots. The Bulls could create another by moving off Kam Jones, whom they acquired in their draft-night trade with the Indiana Pacers, but they need to make a call on his contract today, June 30, or it becomes fully guaranteed for 2026-27.

Josh Giddey, Tre Jones, Rob Dillingham, Kam Jones, Dailyn Swain, Isaac Okoro, Matas Buzelis, Patrick Williams, Caleb Wilson, Noa Essengue, Leonard Miller, Jalen Smith and Nic Claxton are on the current list.

Among the names listed as available options elsewhere are Anfernee Simons, Collin Sexton, Zach Collins, Guerschon Yabusele, Nic Richards, Mac McClung*, Yuki Kawamura* and Lachlan Olbrich*.

This post will be updated with more information starting at 5:00 p.m. CT on June 30, 2026

In Other News...

Bulls May Finally Have A Real Plan To Fix Their Shooting

The Bulls search for more reliable shooting appears to be moving from theory to action, with reports indicating the front office is preparing to chase veteran guard Norman Powell once free agency opens. For a team that has spent too much time trying to manufacture spacing around the edges, the idea of adding a proven scorer who can help open the floor fits the direction Chicago has been signaling as it reshapes the roster.

There is also interest on the trade front, where Chicago has reportedly been in touch with Cleveland about adding another perimeter threat. Nothing has been finalized, and the broader plan still depends on how those talks develop, but the fact that the Bulls are actively working both free agency and trade avenues suggests they understand the problem clearly. The unresolved part now is whether they can turn that intent into the kind of shooting upgrade that changes how the rest of the offense functions. [Read more 🡒]

Jalen Smith Just Got A Surprising Lifeline In Chicago

Jalen Smiths path in Chicago just got a little less crowded. The Bulls have already reshaped their frontcourt with additions like Nic Claxton and Caleb Wilson, and Smith has still been trying to carve out a consistent role after uneven footing since arriving. With the center market looking thin, every move around the league matters, and one recent decision elsewhere may have quietly helped his outlook.

The bigger takeaway for the Bulls is that Smiths chances of sticking as a backup center appear to have improved for 2026-27. He still has plenty to prove before that becomes reality, but a narrower pool of outside options gives Chicago more reason to see whether he can settle into the role it has had trouble defining. [Read more 🡒]

Bulls Already Gave Up On One New Guard For A Reason

Kam Jones stay in Chicago ended almost as quickly as it began. Less than a week after the Bulls picked him up in a draft-night trade from Indiana, the team waived the guard rather than carry him into the next stage of its offseason roster decisions.

Jones arrived as the 38th pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, but the Bulls moved on before his first training camp with the team could even take shape. For Chicago, the decision was about keeping flexibility as the roster picture continues to settle, and it leaves another open spot as the front office sorts through what comes next. [Read more 🡒]