Fred VanVleet is exercising his $25 million player option to remain with the Houston Rockets for the 2026-27 season, returning to a team that spent the past year without him after he tore his right ACL before the season even began.
The decision was confirmed through VanVleet’s representation and comes as little surprise given the circumstances of how the option was structured. The 32-year-old and the Rockets had worked together to design a contract framework that gave Houston short-term financial flexibility while giving VanVleet security in the event of exactly the kind of injury that ended his 2025-26 campaign before it started.
A season lost before it began
VanVleet suffered the ACL tear during an unofficial team minicamp in the Bahamas ahead of training camp, ending his season without a single regular-season appearance. He had signed a two-year, $50 million deal the previous summer structured to give the Rockets cap room to operate while also creating a path to free agency for VanVleet in 2026. The injury scrambled that plan entirely.
Houston spent the season attempting to manage without a proven starting point guard. The by-committee approach the Rockets employed in his absence lacked the consistency a single experienced playmaker provides, and the team’s offensive limitations contributed to a first-round playoff exit. The absence of VanVleet was felt not just in the statistics but in the structure of what Houston was trying to build.
What VanVleet brings back to Houston
The last time VanVleet played meaningful basketball, he was at his best. In the 2025 playoffs against Golden State, he averaged 18.7 points across a seven-game series, and in the final four games of that series he posted numbers that reflected a player at the peak of his abilities, shooting at historically efficient levels on high volume.
His regular-season averages over the course of his career reflect a steady, reliable contributor who organizes an offense, defends at a high level, and makes the plays that connect a roster’s individual pieces into a functioning team. Over his career he has averaged close to 15 points and nearly six assists per game, numbers that are more meaningful in context than in isolation because of how much he elevates the play of teammates around him.
In Houston, that value will be amplified by the presence of Kevin Durant, who joined the Rockets last summer. The pairing of a veteran playmaking guard who sets the table alongside one of the most efficient scorers the league has ever produced represents the offensive foundation the Rockets were trying to build when VanVleet’s injury derailed the 2025-26 season before it started.
Looking ahead to the return
VanVleet has not played since the 2024-25 season, meaning he will be returning from a significant injury after a year away from the court. ACL recoveries vary, and the nature of his rehabilitation will shape expectations for how he looks in the early stages of next season. The Rockets will need to manage his return thoughtfully, balancing the desire to get their full roster back together against the reality of reintegrating a player who has been away from game action for an extended period.
The option of spending next season healthy and productive alongside Durant gives VanVleet the opportunity to rebuild his market value before entering free agency again. For the Rockets, getting the player they signed and paid for back on the floor gives them the legitimate starting point guard they lacked all of last season, and with it a better chance of advancing past the first round they reached and exited without him.

