July 1 has a way of cutting through the noise in the NBA. Once the league calendar flips and the official cap, tax and apron numbers are set, every team gets a clearer picture of where it stands.
For the Orlando Magic, that clarity comes with a big price tag.
Paolo Banchero’s contract numbers are now finalized, and the biggest salary on the roster is officially in place. Banchero signed a max extension last summer with Rose Rule language in his deal, but because he did not make the All-NBA team, he is due 25 percent of the salary cap. The NBA set the 2027 salary cap at $164.961 million, which puts Banchero’s first-year salary at $41,240,250.
If the contract runs with full eight-percent raises over five seasons, the total would reach a franchise-record $241.9 million. There is, however, one wrinkle: according to Spotrac, there is no raise between the second and third year of the deal, which gives the Magic a little more flexibility and means Banchero did not sign a full max. Banchero also received a player option on the fifth season, a rare inclusion not offered since Trae Young and Luka Doncic.
Either way, the numbers are enormous. Banchero and Franz Wagner are the first $50 million players in franchise history.
And that is exactly why Orlando has landed deep in luxury-tax territory.
President of basketball operations Jeff Weltman has been warning that this was coming. Drafting well eventually turns into paying well, and the Magic are now at that stage. Wagner’s max extension kicked in last season, and he is set to make $41.8 million this season in the second year of his five-year deal.
Between Wagner and Banchero, Orlando is paying $83.0 million to its top two players. That is 50.3 percent of the salary cap. Add Desmond Bane at $39.4 million and Jalen Suggs at $32.4 million, and the Magic are well beyond the cap line.
They will be a first-apron team this season, with $210.5 million in guaranteed salary. That puts them over the $200.4 million tax line and the $209.0 million first-apron line. The consequences are already shaping how the front office can operate: under the first apron, Orlando cannot take back more money than it sends out in trades, and it is limited to the taxpayer mid-level exception, which is worth $6.0 million.
The squeeze does not stop there. The Magic are only $11.2 million below the second apron, and with three roster spots still to fill, hardcapping themselves there by using the taxpayer mid-level exception does not seem likely.
This is the cost of building a contender under the new rules. At some point, a team has to choose between keeping the core together and pulling it apart. Orlando is getting close to that crossroads.
For now, the organization is betting on its stars. The Magic believe they have two All-Star players, and they have paid them like it. That leaves the future tied to Banchero and Wagner living up to the contracts they now carry.
At least through 2030, Orlando is locked into expensive rosters that should be in the mix near the top of the Eastern Conference. The “should” is the part the Magic still have to prove.
Still, this is where they wanted to be. For the first time since Dwight Howard’s departure, the Magic are in the tax, and not just barely. They are deep into it, with all the restrictions that come with it.
The path is expensive, but it is also familiar for successful teams. The challenge now is turning that spending into wins.
For the moment, Orlando has its two stars locked in.
In Other News...
Nikola Vuevi Chose Orlando Again And Magic Fans Will Love Why
Nikola Vuevi is heading back to a familiar place, agreeing to a one-year deal with the Magic and setting up another run in Orlando after nearly nine seasons there the first time around. For a team that knows exactly what it is getting, the appeal is obvious: a proven big man who can rebound, space the floor and bring a steady presence to a roster that still values those traits.
The return also says plenty about where the relationship stands now. Vuevi is no longer being asked to carry the load he once did, and the expectation is that he will fit in as a veteran bench piece whose value goes beyond scoring. For Orlando, it is a low-risk reunion with a player who already understands the franchise, the market and the role the Magic need him to fill. [Read more 🡒]
Magic Just Lost A Familiar Frontcourt Piece They Still Needed
Moritz Wagner spent six seasons giving Orlando a sturdy, recognizable presence in the frontcourt, and his move now leaves the Magic with one less familiar option in a spot where depth always matters. Brooklyn has agreed to bring him in on a two-year deal, betting that a veteran big who knows how to play his role can help shore up a rebuilding roster looking for size and experience.
For Orlando, the loss stings a little more because this was not just a name on the end of the bench. Wagner was working his way back from a torn ACL, and the Magic had already been navigating their center rotation with Wendell Carter Jr. and Goga Bitadze ahead of him, making his departure a reminder of how quickly a useful piece can disappear from the picture. The frontcourt is still intact, but one of the more dependable reinforcements the team could turn to is now gone. [Read more 🡒]
