Last Updated on April 2, 2026 by Mat Diekhake

Tim Duncan’s contract history with the San Antonio Spurs is one of the cleanest one-franchise salary records in NBA history, but it has one twist that makes it more interesting than a standard superstar earnings page. He spent his entire playing career with San Antonio, then still collected stretched salary payments after retirement because of how the Spurs handled the final year of his last contract. (spotrac.com)

Spotrac lists Duncan’s total NBA career earnings at $243,906,050, all with the Spurs, and its cash ledger runs through 2018-19 rather than stopping at 2015-16 because the remaining money from his final option year was stretched into three retained-salary payments. (spotrac.com)

What makes Tim Duncan contract history especially strong as a standalone topic is that it shows both his true market value and his repeated willingness to sign below-max deals. The page covers his rookie contract, his 2000 return to San Antonio after free agency, the massive seven-year contract he signed in 2003, and then the later-career sacrifice deals that helped the Spurs keep contending. (Los Angeles Times)

Tim Duncan Contract Agreements (As Signed)

This table tracks each contract event as Duncan and the Spurs agreed to it at the time. The second table below is labeled as actual cash paid, and for Duncan that intentionally includes the post-retirement retained salary created by the stretch provision. (spotrac.com)

DATE AGE TEAM CONTRACT MOVE REPORTED TERMS SEASONS AFFECTED CLAUSES / OPTIONS DETAILED NOTES
June 25, 1997 21 San Antonio Spurs Drafted No. 1 overall First overall pick in 1997 NBA Draft 1997 draft rights Spurs selected him directly This is the true starting point of Tim Duncan’s contract history because San Antonio never had to acquire his rights from another team.
July 23, 1997 21 San Antonio Spurs Signed rookie-scale contract 3 years, $10,239,080 1997-98 to 1999-00 Standard rookie-scale structure Duncan’s first NBA deal immediately tied the franchise to a player who would become the face of the Spurs for nearly two decades.
August 1, 2000 24 San Antonio Spurs Re-signed with San Antonio Spotrac logs 3 years, $31,902,500; contemporary AP reporting commonly described it as about 3 years, $32.6 million 2000-01 to 2002-03 guaranteed 2003-04 player option path Duncan turned down Orlando’s pursuit and stayed with San Antonio, preserving the Robinson-Duncan core and setting up the next championship phase of the franchise.
June 30, 2003 27 San Antonio Spurs Declined player option / became free agent Passed on final option year commonly reported at about $13.3 million 2003 offseason Entered unrestricted free agency After the 2003 title run, Duncan chose the longer-term route instead of simply playing on the option year.
July 16, 2003 27 San Antonio Spurs Re-signed with San Antonio 7 years, $122,007,706 2003-04 onward Built-in early-exit / option structure later revisited in 2007 This was Duncan’s peak-value contract, signed just after another championship and at the height of his prime-star leverage.
November 2, 2007 31 San Antonio Spurs Exercised option and voided early termination ability Exercised $19 million player option for 2008-09 2008-09 Player option exercised; early termination ability voided This procedural move kept the existing deal alive and cleared the way for San Antonio and Duncan to extend the relationship again days later.
November 5, 2007 31 San Antonio Spurs Signed veteran extension 2 years, $40 million 2010-11 to 2011-12 Below-max veteran extension Duncan again chose continuity and flexibility over squeezing every possible dollar out of the market.
July 11, 2012 36 San Antonio Spurs Re-signed with San Antonio Spotrac logs 3 years, $30,361,446; initial reports commonly placed it around 3 years, $36 million 2012-13 to 2014-15 2014-15 player option; no-trade clause This was one of the clearest Tim Duncan pay-cut contracts, giving San Antonio more room to keep building around its veteran core.
June 23, 2014 38 San Antonio Spurs Exercised player option $10,361,446 option for 2014-15 2014-15 Player option exercised Duncan stayed on the contract he had signed in 2012 instead of reopening negotiations after the 2014 title.
July 9, 2015 39 San Antonio Spurs Re-signed with San Antonio 2 years, $10.85 million 2015-16 to 2016-17 2016-17 player option; fresh no-trade clause This was another major discount deal and fit the Spurs’ broader cap-management push during their LaMarcus Aldridge pursuit.
June 28, 2016 40 San Antonio Spurs Exercised player option $5.64 million option for 2016-17 2016-17 Player option exercised Duncan picked up the final year first, then made his retirement decision afterward.
July 11, 2016 40 San Antonio Spurs Retired and was waived by San Antonio Remaining option-year money was stretched into 3 annual retained payments of $1,881,250 2016-17 to 2018-19 cash record Stretch provision / retained salary This is the key quirk in Duncan’s full contract history: his playing career ended in 2016, but his Spurs cash ledger continued for three more seasons.

Table sources: Spotrac contract page, earnings table, and transaction log; Los Angeles Times/AP on the 1997 rookie deal; ESPN/AP on the 2000 contract structure and 2003 option decision; ESPN on the 2003 seven-year deal; AP reporting on the 2007 extension; ESPN/NBC Sports on the 2012 and 2015 re-signings; Express-News and ESPN on the 2016 option decision; ESPN on the post-retirement stretch payments. (spotrac.com)

Tim Duncan NBA Salaries by Season (Actual Cash Paid, Including Post-Retirement Retained Salary)

This table tracks Duncan’s actual cash by season. Because this is a full earnings history rather than an on-court salary-only table, the last three rows keep the retained post-retirement payments that flowed from the Spurs stretching the final year of his last contract. (spotrac.com)

SEASON AGE CASH PAID CUMULATIVE CAREER EARNINGS CONTRACT PHASE
1997-98 21 $2,967,840 $2,967,840 Rookie contract
1998-99 22 $3,413,000 $6,380,840 Rookie contract
1999-00 23 $3,858,240 $10,239,080 Rookie contract
2000-01 24 $9,600,000 $19,839,080 2000 re-signing
2001-02 25 $10,230,000 $30,069,080 2000 re-signing
2002-03 26 $12,072,500 $42,141,580 2000 re-signing
2003-04 27 $12,676,125 $54,817,705 2003 superstar deal
2004-05 28 $14,260,641 $69,078,346 2003 superstar deal
2005-06 29 $15,845,156 $84,923,502 2003 superstar deal
2006-07 30 $17,429,672 $102,353,174 2003 superstar deal
2007-08 31 $19,014,188 $121,367,362 2003 superstar deal
2008-09 32 $20,598,704 $141,966,066 2003 option structure
2009-10 33 $22,183,220 $164,149,286 2003 option structure
2010-11 34 $18,835,381 $182,984,667 2007 extension
2011-12 35 $17,034,937 $200,019,604 2007 extension
2012-13 36 $9,638,554 $209,658,158 2012 pay-cut deal
2013-14 37 $10,361,446 $220,019,604 2012 pay-cut deal
2014-15 38 $10,361,446 $230,381,050 2012 pay-cut deal
2015-16 39 $6,000,000 $236,381,050 Final playing contract
2016-17 40 $1,881,250 $238,262,300 Post-retirement retained salary
2017-18 41 $1,881,250 $240,143,550 Post-retirement retained salary
2018-19 42 $1,881,250 $243,906,050 Post-retirement retained salary
TOTAL $243,906,050 $243,906,050 San Antonio Spurs only

Table source: Spotrac cash earnings table and transaction log. (spotrac.com)

Analysis

Tim Duncan’s contract history reads best in four phases. The first is the standard rookie phase. The second is the prime-money phase, when he re-signed in 2000 and then landed the seven-year, $122 million deal in 2003 as one of the league’s defining franchise players. The third is the flexibility phase, when Duncan and the Spurs started choosing structure and continuity over raw max-value extraction. The fourth is the legacy phase, when his later contracts were as much about sustaining San Antonio’s competitive window as they were about annual salary. (spotrac.com)

The most important pattern on the page is not just that Duncan stayed with one team. It is that he repeatedly took less than he plausibly could have taken. AP reporting tied the 2007 extension to a below-max number, NBC Sports highlighted the size of the 2012 haircut, and ESPN’s 2015 reporting made clear that his final playing contract again came in at a discount structure with a player option and no-trade protection. That is the core reason Tim Duncan contract history has real narrative value instead of reading like a thin salary list. (The Washington Post)

The other detail that makes this post worth publishing is the ending. Most retired-player contract pages stop with the final playing season. Duncan’s does not. Because the Spurs waived him after he exercised the 2016-17 option and then stretched the remaining money, his full cash trail kept running through 2018-19. That gives this page a cleaner, more complete ending than a typical legend-salary post, and it also explains why his total career earnings exceed what many readers will remember from his active-playing years alone. (spotrac.com)

Sources:

Spotrac Tim Duncan contract page, transaction log, and cash earnings table. (spotrac.com)
Los Angeles Times / AP on Duncan’s 1997 rookie contract. (Los Angeles Times)
ESPN / Associated Press on Duncan’s 2003 option decision and 2003 seven-year, $122 million re-signing, including reference to the 2000 contract structure. (ESPN.com)
Associated Press reporting on Duncan’s 2007 two-year, $40 million extension. (The Washington Post)
ESPN, NBC Sports, and SB Nation on Duncan’s 2012 and 2015 pay-cut contracts, player options, and no-trade clauses. (ESPN.com)
ESPN, San Antonio Express-News, Reuters, and ESPN on Duncan’s 2016 option decision, retirement, and stretched post-retirement salary. (ESPN.com)