Last Updated on May 26, 2026 by Mat Diekhake
Amar’e Stoudemire’s contract history sits at the intersection of two NBA eras. The first was the early-2000s period when elite high-school prospects could still jump directly into the league and become franchise stars almost immediately. The second was the salary-cap explosion era that reshaped superstar contracts around the beginning of the 2010s.
Because of that timing, Stoudemire’s career earnings escalated dramatically over the course of his NBA run. He entered the league on a relatively modest rookie structure after being drafted directly out of high school by the Phoenix Suns in 2002, but by 2010 he had become one of the NBA’s premier free agents and signed a massive contract that effectively revived the New York Knicks as a major-market destination again. (Wikipedia)
His contract timeline is also unusual because injuries became deeply connected to nearly every major financial decision attached to his career. Teams were constantly weighing Stoudemire’s elite offensive production against long-term durability concerns, particularly involving his knees and later his back. That tension shaped not only the size of his contracts, but also where he played and how front offices viewed him entering free agency.
Amar’e Stoudemire Contract Agreements (As Signed)
| DATE | AGE | TEAM | CONTRACT MOVE | REPORTED TERMS | SEASONS AFFECTED | CLAUSES / OPTIONS | DETAILED NOTES |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 26, 2002 | 19 | Phoenix Suns | Drafted No. 9 overall | Rookie-scale draft rights acquired | 2002 draft rights | High-school draftee | Phoenix selected Stoudemire directly out of high school, beginning one of the most explosive young careers of the era. |
| July 2002 | 19 | Phoenix Suns | Signed rookie contract | Multi-year rookie-scale agreement | 2002-03 onward | Rookie structure | Stoudemire immediately outperformed the financial value of the contract by winning Rookie of the Year. |
| October 31, 2005 | 22 | Phoenix Suns | Signed rookie extension | 5 years, approximately $73 million | 2006-07 to 2010-11 | Maximum-extension structure | Phoenix committed franchise-level money despite serious concerns surrounding prior knee surgery. |
| June 30, 2010 | 27 | Phoenix Suns | Opted out of contract | Entered unrestricted free agency | 2010 offseason | Free agency | Stoudemire became one of the biggest names in the historic 2010 free-agent class. (Wikipedia) |
| July 5, 2010 | 27 | New York Knicks | Signed free-agent contract | 5 years, approximately $99.7 million | 2010-11 to 2014-15 | Maximum-contract structure | The Knicks made Stoudemire their centerpiece signing during the franchise’s major rebuild. (SNY) |
| February 16, 2015 | 32 | New York Knicks | Buyout agreement reached | Contract bought out | 2014-15 | Buyout | Injuries and declining production led New York to negotiate an early separation. |
| February 18, 2015 | 32 | Dallas Mavericks | Signed veteran contract | Rest-of-season deal | 2014-15 | Veteran minimum structure | Dallas added Stoudemire as frontcourt depth for a playoff push. |
| July 10, 2015 | 32 | Miami Heat | Signed free-agent contract | 1 year, veteran minimum deal | 2015-16 | Minimum contract | Miami added Stoudemire as a low-cost veteran frontcourt piece. |
| August 1, 2016 | 33 | New York Knicks | Signed ceremonial retirement contract | One-day contract | Retirement | Retired as a Knick | Stoudemire formally retired with New York after 14 NBA seasons. (ESPN Australia) |
Amar’e Stoudemire NBA Salaries by Season
| SEASON | AGE | TEAM | SALARY | CONTRACT CONTEXT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002-03 | 20 | Phoenix | $2,388,600 | Rookie contract |
| 2003-04 | 21 | Phoenix | $2,568,360 | Rookie contract |
| 2004-05 | 22 | Phoenix | $2,748,120 | Rookie contract |
| 2005-06 | 23 | Phoenix | $5,103,000 | Rookie option year |
| 2006-07 | 24 | Phoenix | $12,417,000 | Rookie extension |
| 2007-08 | 25 | Phoenix | $13,686,500 | Rookie extension |
| 2008-09 | 26 | Phoenix | $14,956,000 | Rookie extension |
| 2009-10 | 27 | Phoenix | $16,225,500 | Rookie extension |
| 2010-11 | 28 | New York | $16,486,611 | Knicks max contract |
| 2011-12 | 29 | New York | $18,217,705 | Knicks max contract |
| 2012-13 | 30 | New York | $19,948,799 | Knicks max contract |
| 2013-14 | 31 | New York | $21,679,893 | Knicks max contract |
| 2014-15 | 32 | New York / Dallas | $23,410,988 | Final Knicks salary year |
| 2015-16 | 33 | Miami | $1,499,187 | Veteran minimum deal |
| TOTAL | $169,336,263 | NBA career earnings |
The Phoenix Extension Gamble
The most important financial gamble in Stoudemire’s career happened long before he reached New York.
In 2005, Phoenix committed approximately $73 million to Stoudemire despite major uncertainty surrounding his long-term knee health. At the time, he was already one of the NBA’s most dominant offensive big men, especially playing alongside Steve Nash in Mike D’Antoni’s system, but there were legitimate concerns about whether his body would hold up over the life of a maximum-style extension.
That decision ultimately defined the remainder of his career financially. The Suns got several elite seasons out of the deal, but the injury concerns never completely disappeared. Those same concerns followed him directly into free agency years later.
Why the Knicks Contract Changed Everything
Stoudemire’s 2010 contract with the Knicks was bigger than basketball.
New York had spent years clearing cap space chasing a transformational free agent, and Stoudemire became the player willing to say yes first. His arrival immediately changed the perception of the franchise around the league and restored relevance to a Knicks organization that had struggled badly throughout much of the 2000s. (Wikipedia)
Financially, the deal represented the peak of Stoudemire’s earning power. The Knicks committed nearly $100 million despite widespread concern surrounding the long-term condition of his knees. Phoenix reportedly offered a contract with more injury-related protections and fewer guarantees, while New York was willing to make the larger unconditional commitment. (Wikipedia)
For a brief period, the investment looked brilliant. Stoudemire immediately became an MVP-level player during his first Knicks season and helped drag the franchise back into playoff contention. But as injuries accumulated, the back half of the contract became increasingly difficult for New York to manage from both a roster-building and salary-cap standpoint.
The Late-Career Financial Decline
Unlike some superstars who maintain high salaries deep into their 30s, Stoudemire’s earning trajectory dropped sharply once his athleticism declined.
After the Knicks buyout in 2015, the remainder of his NBA contracts were minimum-level veteran agreements. That represented a dramatic shift from the near-$100 million franchise centerpiece contract he had signed only a few years earlier.
Still, Stoudemire finished with more than $169 million in NBA earnings, multiple All-NBA selections, and one of the most influential contract decisions of the early 2010s. His Knicks deal, in particular, became one of the defining financial moves of that NBA era because it symbolized both the power and the risk attached to max-level free-agent spending.
Sources:
- Amar’e Stoudemire agrees to five-year deal with Knicks — SNY
- Knicks Reach a Deal With Stoudemire — The New York Times
- Amar’e Stoudemire says Suns retirement would’ve been perfect — ESPN
- Phoenix Suns history and Stoudemire free-agency details — Wikipedia
- History of the New York Knicks and Stoudemire signing — Wikipedia
- Amar’e Stoudemire retires from the NBA as a New York Knick — TIME
- Amar’e Stoudemire NBA contract and salary history — Spotrac (spotrac.com)
