Last Updated on May 26, 2026 by Mat Diekhake

John Wall’s contract history is one of the most financially significant timelines of any point guard from his era. From becoming the No. 1 overall pick in the 2010 NBA Draft to signing one of the largest extensions in league history with the Washington Wizards, Wall’s career earnings reflect both his peak status as a franchise superstar and the enormous guaranteed money attached to NBA max contracts in the modern salary-cap era.

According to Spotrac, Wall earned more than $276 million during his NBA career across stops with Washington, Houston, the Clippers, and briefly San Antonio through guaranteed salary obligations and buyouts. His contract record also became heavily tied to one of the most difficult injury stretches any max-level player has experienced after Achilles and knee issues dramatically altered the second half of his career.

John Wall Contract Agreements (As Signed)

This table tracks the major contract events of John Wall’s NBA career, including rookie agreements, max extensions, trades, buyouts, and veteran free-agent contracts.

DATE AGE TEAM CONTRACT MOVE REPORTED TERMS SEASONS AFFECTED CLAUSES / OPTIONS DETAILED NOTES
June 24, 2010 19 Washington Wizards Drafted No. 1 overall First overall rookie-scale rights acquired 2010 draft rights Rookie-scale structure Washington selected Wall first overall and immediately built the franchise around him after his one season at Kentucky.
July 8, 2010 19 Washington Wizards Signed rookie-scale contract 4 years, approximately $24.1 million 2010-11 to 2013-14 Two team-option seasons Wall entered the NBA on the standard rookie-scale structure for a No. 1 overall selection.
October 29, 2012 22 Washington Wizards Fourth-year option exercised 2013-14 option picked up 2013-14 Team option Washington locked in Wall’s final rookie-contract season before extension talks intensified.
July 31, 2013 22 Washington Wizards Rookie max extension signed 5 years, approximately $80 million 2014-15 to 2018-19 Designated-player extension Wall signed the extension before the 2013-14 season and officially became the centerpiece of Washington’s long-term plans.
July 26, 2017 26 Washington Wizards Supermax-style veteran extension signed 4 years, $170 million extension 2019-20 to 2022-23 Player option in final season This became one of the richest contracts in NBA history at the time and was signed shortly after Wall earned All-NBA honors.
December 2, 2020 30 Houston Rockets Traded from Washington to Houston Existing supermax contract transferred 2020-21 onward Fully guaranteed deal remained intact Washington traded Wall for Russell Westbrook in a massive star-contract swap after Wall missed significant time with injuries.
September 2021 31 Houston Rockets Agreement to sit out while seeking resolution Full salary remained owed 2021-22 Contract unchanged Houston chose to prioritize younger guards while Wall remained away from active play despite his guaranteed salary.
June 28, 2022 31 Houston Rockets Buyout agreement finalized Wall gave back part of guaranteed salary in buyout 2022 offseason Free agency reopened Houston negotiated a buyout to allow Wall to enter unrestricted free agency before the final contract year expired.
July 8, 2022 31 Los Angeles Clippers Signed free-agent contract 2 years, $13.2 million 2022-23 to 2023-24 Second year non-guaranteed Wall joined the Clippers on a much smaller deal after leaving Houston.
February 9, 2023 32 Houston Rockets Reacquired in multi-team trade Existing Clippers contract absorbed 2022-23 Immediately waived Houston briefly reacquired Wall before waiving him shortly afterward.
August 2023 32 Free Agent Remained unsigned entering season No new NBA contract finalized 2023-24 onward Veteran free agency Wall effectively moved out of the active NBA market despite still being relatively young by league standards.

John Wall NBA Salaries by Season (Actual Salary Paid)

This table tracks Wall’s reported NBA salary by season and how his cumulative career earnings grew over time.

SEASON AGE TEAM SALARY CUMULATIVE CAREER EARNINGS CONTRACT PHASE
2010-11 20 Washington $4,913,640 $4,913,640 Rookie contract
2011-12 21 Washington $5,293,440 $10,207,080 Rookie contract
2012-13 22 Washington $5,673,240 $15,880,320 Rookie contract
2013-14 23 Washington $7,459,925 $23,340,245 Rookie option year
2014-15 24 Washington $14,746,000 $38,086,245 Rookie max extension
2015-16 25 Washington $15,852,000 $53,938,245 Rookie max extension
2016-17 26 Washington $16,957,900 $70,896,145 Rookie max extension
2017-18 27 Washington $18,063,850 $88,959,995 Rookie max extension
2018-19 28 Washington $19,169,800 $108,129,795 Rookie max extension
2019-20 29 Washington $37,800,000 $145,929,795 Supermax extension
2020-21 30 Houston $41,254,920 $187,184,715 Supermax extension
2021-22 31 Houston $44,310,840 $231,495,555 Supermax extension
2022-23 32 Houston / Clippers $47,366,760 $278,862,315 Buyout and Clippers contract structure
TOTAL $278,862,315 $278,862,315 Multiple franchises

Analysis

John Wall’s contract history is largely defined by timing. During the first half of his career, Wall developed exactly the way teams hope a No. 1 overall pick will develop: into an All-NBA guard capable of leading a franchise deep into the playoffs. That trajectory positioned him perfectly for the 2017 supermax-style extension he signed with Washington, which was worth roughly $170 million over four additional seasons and pushed his total guaranteed earnings to historic levels for a point guard at the time.

The key turning point in Wall’s financial and basketball timeline came almost immediately afterward. Injuries began dramatically reducing his availability, first with knee problems and then with the devastating Achilles injury he suffered after slipping at home during recovery. Because NBA contracts are largely guaranteed, Wall still received the full value of his extension despite missing enormous stretches of time, which made his deal one of the most discussed contracts in the league from a cap-management perspective.

Washington eventually traded Wall to Houston in 2020 in exchange for Russell Westbrook, creating one of the rare situations where two massive superstar contracts were exchanged primarily because both franchises were attempting to reset direction. Houston later kept Wall away from active play while prioritizing younger guards, even as he continued earning over $44 million annually under the terms of his guaranteed contract.

The final phase of Wall’s contract history shows how sharply NBA market value can shift after major injuries. After agreeing to a buyout with Houston, Wall signed with the Clippers on a comparatively modest contract worth roughly $13 million over two years. That deal was dramatically smaller than the supermax structure he had previously been playing under and effectively marked the transition from franchise centerpiece to short-term veteran contributor.

Even with the difficult injury-related decline in the second half of his career, Wall still finished with nearly $279 million in career earnings. His contract history remains historically notable because it captures both extremes of the NBA salary system: the rapid financial rise of a superstar No. 1 pick and the long-term guaranteed protections attached to modern max contracts.

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