Multiple NBA teams reportedly are interested in acquiring Jaylen Brown if the Celtics make him available this offseason, according to a report Monday from NBA insider Marc Stein.

There is “belief in some corners of the league” that the Atlanta Hawks, Houston Rockets and Portland Trail Blazers “all have legitimate trade interest in Brown,” Stein wrote on his “The Stein Line” Substack.

The Hawks are Brown’s hometown team. The Rockets are coached by former Boston head coach Ime Udoka. The Trail Blazers, whose current roster features ex-Celtics Jrue Holiday and Robert Williams III, are coming off their best season in five years. All three teams were eliminated in the first round of the NBA playoffs and could benefit from adding a player of Brown’s caliber.

Brown is coming off the best statistical season of his career, setting personal bests in points (28.7), rebounds (6.9) and assists (5.1) per game while making second-team All-NBA and finishing sixth in NBA MVP voting. But questions about his future in Boston have swirled since the Celtics blew a 3-1 series lead en route to their first opening-round playoff exit since 2021. Boston played the first 62 games of the season — and Game 7 of its series against Philadelphia — without Brown’s longtime co-star, Jayson Tatum.

Multiple national NBA reporters, including Stein and ESPN’s Shams Charania, have linked the Celtics to two-time NBA MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, who is on the trade block this offseason. Including Brown in a deal for Antetokounmpo — either sending him to Milwaukee or diverting him to a third team like Atlanta, Houston or Portland — would be the most likely way to make that blockbuster deal work from a salary perspective.

The 29-year-old Brown has three years remaining on the supermax contract he signed in 2023, and he will become eligible in July for a two-year extension worth roughly $140 million.

“I love Boston,” Brown said in a Twitch stream earlier this month. “If it were up to me, I would play in Boston for the next 10 years.”

In a separate stream Sunday night, Brown said he believes he has yet to reach his peak.

“This is Year 10, but this is the first time in an extended amount of time that I was able to get this level of responsibility,” he said. “So this year, I was learning a lot on the fly and had to adjust, and also lead a team and stuff like that at the same time. But it was fun. It was great. So I’m still looking to continue to improve. I’m still looking to continue to evolve.

“I feel like I’m coming into my prime. My mind, my body, athleticism is all coming together, so I’m excited to kind of see what I can do and where I can go with it. I don’t think I’ve reached my limit yet, and I don’t have no plans of not reaching my limit.”