Trae Young will decline his $48.97 million player option for the 2026-27 season and enter free agency on Monday, sources confirmed Wednesday, setting off what is expected to be a competitive pursuit of one of the most dynamic playmakers in the NBA.
Washington remains the team most likely to re-sign the four-time All-Star, but multiple franchises are expected to express serious interest once the market opens. The Wizards acquired Young in a midseason trade and have structured their rebuild around the belief that he and veteran big man Anthony Davis can form an All-Star pairing capable of returning the franchise to playoff relevance after three consecutive seasons of losing 64 or more games.
A season defined by injury and transition
Young entered last season with significant personal stakes. He was determined to demonstrate his value as a maximum contract player and establish himself as the kind of franchise-defining leader the Atlanta Hawks needed to compete in the Eastern Conference. Neither objective came close to being realized.
A sprained right MCL in the season’s fifth game in late October sidelined him for nearly two months. When he returned in December, the Hawks had already begun moving in a different direction, leaning into the development of a rising young star who had performed strongly during Young’s absence. Atlanta traded Young to Washington in early January in a deal that brought back a veteran guard and a forward.
Young appeared in only five games for the Wizards following the trade and posted averages of 17.9 points and 8.0 assists across his combined 15 appearances for both teams. The truncated season made it difficult for him to make the case he had set out to make, and the opt-out decision reflects a player who believes a full and healthy year will command a better deal than his existing option provided.
What Washington is betting on
The Wizards’ pitch to Young centers on opportunity and vision. The franchise traded for him with a specific role in mind, using his career average of 9.8 assists per game to anchor a young roster in need of a proven offensive architect. Alongside Davis, who was also acquired last season, the team believes it has the veteran foundation to accelerate the development of a group of young players that includes several recent high draft selections and the first overall pick in next week’s NBA draft.
That construction represents a real attempt to compress the rebuild timeline and deliver meaningful improvement in the standings within the next season or two. For Young, the appeal is the chance to be the central figure in that project, the player whose playmaking and leadership define how the team grows rather than a supporting piece in someone else’s story.
The risk for Washington is real. Young declined a substantial guaranteed sum, which means he is testing his market value rather than simply accepting what the team offered. If another organization presents a more compelling financial or competitive offer, the Wizards will need to match or exceed it to keep the centerpiece of the rebuild they have been constructing around him.
The broader context of Washington’s offseason
The opt-out arrives at a consequential moment for the franchise. Alex Sarr, one of the young players Washington is counting on as part of its core, recently underwent surgery after fracturing his foot, adding a layer of uncertainty to the team’s short-term outlook. The first overall pick in next week’s draft adds another major decision to an offseason that already involves re-signing Young and managing the roster around Davis.
How all of those pieces fit together will define whether Washington’s rebuild accelerates on schedule or faces another setback.

