Forbes Highest-Paid NBA Players 2025 List

Stephen Curry steals the basketball earnings crown to end LeBron James’ 11-year reign and lead a top ten hauling in a record $902 million this season.


There is no one in NBA history who has been able to drain a 3-pointer quite like the Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry. And no one can score financially quite like him, either.

Due to collect an estimated $159.6 million in pretax earnings this season—counting both his playing salary and his annual income from endorsements and other business endeavors—the 37-year-old point guard is the NBA’s highest-paid player for the first time in his storied pro career, now entering its 17th season.

In fact, across the previous 15 editions of Forbes’ annual earnings ranking, which projects income for the current basketball season, the closest anyone has come to Curry’s record-setting figure is Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James’ $128.7 million total last year.

James, who had reigned atop the NBA players list for 11 straight years, dating to 2014-15, slips to No. 2 with an estimated $137.6 million.

Curry is now the NBA’s highest-paid player both on the court, with his $59.6 million salary this season, and off it, where he is expected to haul in $100 million this year thanks to a long and lucrative list of partnerships that includes his Curry Brand division of Under Armour. According to Forbes estimates, only four other active athletes have ever cracked nine figures with their business income: golfer Tiger Woods ($105 million in 2009), tennis player Roger Federer ($100 million in 2020), MMA fighter Conor McGregor ($158 million in 2021) and Los Angeles Dodgers two-way phenom Shohei Ohtani ($100 million this year).

But Curry isn’t the only NBA star reaching new heights. Combined, the league’s ten top earners are in line to rake in $902 million this season before taxes and agents’ fees, a 15% increase over last year’s record $787 million.



That total includes $380 million off the court, blowing away the previous high of $330 million, established in 2022-23. Led by James (an estimated $85 million), the Houston Rockets’ Kevin Durant ($51 million) and the Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo ($45 million) along with Curry, the NBA’s top ten are well ahead of the highest-paid players’ off-field totals in MLB ($120 million), the NFL ($110 million) and the NHL ($27 million), as well as global soccer ($238 million), golf ($199 million) and tennis ($192 million).

Things are going even better on the court as basketball’s skyrocketing revenue sends the league’s salary cap shooting up. This season’s ten highest-paid players are collectively set to bank $522 million before agents’ fees—two and a half times the comparable figure from a decade ago, $210 million. During that season, in 2015-16, Kobe Bryant had a league-high $25 million salary, according to contract database Spotrac; this season, 75 players will match or exceed that threshold. (By contrast, the NHL just hit a salary-cap-era record with the Minnesota Wild’s Kirill Kaprizov signing for an average annual contract value of $17 million.)

And those increases don’t even reflect the cash about to pour into the NBA from its landmark national media deals, which were signed last year for a reported $76 billion over 11 years and take effect this season. That package, which will pay teams roughly $4 billion more annually on average compared with the league’s old agreements, should keep the salary cap rising—to a projected $165.5 million next season, from $154.6 million this year.

Meanwhile, Curry is set to become the first in the NBA to cross $60 million with his salary in 2026-27, at $62.6 million—another big score for a player who seemingly can’t miss.


The 10 Highest-Paid NBA Players 2025


#1. $159.6 million

Age: 37 | Position: Point Guard | Team: Golden State Warriors | On-Court: $59.6 million • Off-Court: $100 million

Curry is set to become the tenth player in NBA history to spend at least 17 seasons with one team, but even at the advanced basketball age of 37, he commands respect: In ESPN’s annual off-season survey of coaches, scouts and executives, Curry was named the best American-born player right now. Under contract with the Golden State Warriors until 2027 after signing a one-year extension last year, Curry is a sniper from long range both on the basketball court and on the golf course, which he proved by outdriving the hard-hitting LIV Golf pro Bryson DeChambeau in a YouTube video published last week. Curry also stays busy outside the arena with a collection of businesses under the umbrella of Thirty Ink, which CNBC reported generated $173.5 million in revenue in 2024. His production company Unanimous Media released Good Shot, a documentary about a neighborhood basketball legend, in June and is part of the team behind GOAT, an animated movie slated to hit theaters in February 2026. Meanwhile, the firm announced a podcast partnership with iHeartMedia this year and is co-producing a new show from UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd. Curry also published a book called Shot Ready, distilling his philosophy of success, in September.


#2. $137.6 million

Age: 40 | Position: Forward | Team: Los Angeles Lakers | On-Court: $52.6 million • Off-Court: $85 million

Coming out of the Los Angeles Lakers’ first-round playoff exit in April, the 40-year-old James didn’t rule out retirement, continuing his pattern of recent years, and even after he exercised his $52.6 million player option for the 2025-26 season in June, there was enough uncertainty among fans that some were fooled this month by a cryptic social media post that turned out to be part of an ad campaign for Hennessy. (One fan who bought tickets for what he thought would be one of James’ final games even filed a long-shot lawsuit.) While James is set to become the first player ever to reach 23 years in the NBA, he is showing signs of aging, with a case of sciatica expected to sideline him for the season’s first few weeks. There are no such signs of slowing with his business ventures, however, which include traditional endorsement deals with brands such as Nike, DraftKings and Amazon as well as equity plays like an investment this summer in fantasy sports website Fantasy Life. In June, James debuted a $400,000-plus watch collaboration with Richard Mille, and his men’s grooming brand, The Shop, expanded its distribution beyond Walmart and into CVS locations in March. In 2022, Forbes named James a billionaire, but he recently pushed back on that label, telling Complex, “It’s a couple thousand in my bank.”


#3. $104.3 million

Age: 37 | Position: Forward | Team: Houston Rockets | On-Court: $53.3 million • Off-Court: $51 million

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brettknight/2025/10/21/the-nbas-highest-paid-players-2025/