The 2026 NBA draft takes place starting at 5 p.m. Tuesday at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. The Washington Wizards will make the first selection.
The Clippers have the fifth pick in the first round, while the Lakers will select 25th.
The second round of the draft will be Wednesday night.
Here are the pick-by-pick selections:
2026 NBA DRAFT ORDER
First round
1. Washington: AJ Dybantsa, 19, SF, 6-9, Brigham Young
He has the size, athleticism and playmaking ability to be an offensive force, although he can be a streaky shooter (33.1% on three-pointers). Averaged 25.5 points, 6.8 rebounds and 3.7 assists as a freshman.
2. Utah: Darryn Peterson, 19, SG, 6-5, Kansas
A quick, explosive player, he has scoring ability at all three levels. Missed 11 games because of health problems, but averaged 20.2 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.3 assists while shooting 43.8% (38.2% from deep) as a freshman.
3. Memphis: Cameron Boozer, 18, PF, 6-9, Duke
The athletic, versatile and skilled power forward can be a stretch big (39.1%), although he has the strength to play inside. Averaged 22.5 points, 10.2 rebounds and 4.1 assists on 55.6% shooting as a freshman.
4. Chicago: Caleb Wilson, 19, PF, 6-9, North Carolina
The lanky, athletic big man is a versatile scorer with a quick first step who can score off the ball. At 215 pounds, he needs to bulk up. He averaged 19.8 points on 57.8% shooting, 9.4 rebounds and 2.7 assists as a freshman.
5. Clippers (from Indiana): Keaton Wagler, 19, G, 6-5, Illinois
A combo guard who is a floor leader and a hard-nosed competitor. He can score at all three levels and create. He averaged 17.9 points on 44.5% shooting (39.7% from deep), 5.1 rebounds and 4.7 assists as a freshman.
6. Brooklyn: Mikel Brown Jr., 20, PG, 6-4, Louisville
He has the size, athleticism and playmaking ability, especially in pick-and-roll sets, to excel at the next level. He averaged 18.2 points on 41% shooting (34.4% on threes), 4.7 assists and 3.3 rebounds as a freshman.
7. Sacramento: Darius Acuff Jr., 19, PG, 6-2, Arkansas
A score-first floor leader who makes up for his lack of height with physical play and a smooth shot from three-point range (44%). He averaged 23.5 points on 48.1% shooting, 6.4 assists and 3.1 rebounds as a freshman
8. Atlanta (from New Orleans): Kingston Flemings, 19, PG, 6-3, Houston
An athletic, physical floor leader who can score at all three levels and distribute the ball. He averaged 16.1 points on 47.6% shooting (38.7% from deep), 5.2 assists and 4.7 rebounds as a freshman.
9. Dallas: Morez Johnson, PF, 6-9, Michigan
The Illinois transfer has solid two-way ability with his athleticism and length (7-3½ wingspan). An active defender and rebounder, he averaged 13.1 points, 7.3 rebounds, 1.1 blocks and 0.7 steals as a sophomore.
10. Milwaukee: Brayden Burries, 20, PG, 6-4, Arizona
A strong, physical and skilled floor general who became a leader for the Wildcats as a freshman. He averaged 16.1 points on 49.1% shooting (39.1% from three-point range), 4.9 rebounds and 2.4 assists.
11. Golden State: Yaxel Lendeborg, 23, PF, 6-9, Michigan
A versatile player who has a 7-4 wingspan and projects as a stretch 4. He spent three seasons in junior college and two at Alabama Birmingham before averaging 15.1 points on 51.5% shooting (37.2% on threes), 6.8 rebounds and 3.2 assists.
12. Oklahoma City (from Clippers): Aday Mara, 21, C, 7-3, Michigan
The UCLA transfer had a breakout junior season, displaying his ability to score, pass, defend and rebound during a Final Four run. He averaged 12.1 points on 66.8% shooting, 6.8 rebounds and 2.4 assists last season.
13. Miami: Nate Ament, 19, F, 6-10, Tennessee
A lanky, athletic and skilled combo forward with plenty of upside, although he lacks a consistent outside shot. He averaged 16.7 points on 39.9% shooting (33.3% from deep), 6.3 rebounds and 2.3 assists as a freshman. (Ament’s draft rights have been traded to Milwaukee.)
14. Charlotte: Hannes Steinbach, 20, F-C, 6-10, Washington
The big man, who has club experience in his native Germany, has a powerful inside game with the ability to score and rebound. He averaged 18.5 points on 57.7% shooting (34% on threes), 11.8 rebounds and 1.7 assists.
15. Chicago (from Portland): Dailyn Swain, 20, SF, 6-7, Texas
The Xavier transfer is an athletic, explosive wing who can create off the dribble for himself and teammates. He averaged 17.3 points on 54.2% shooting (34.4% from deep), 7.5 rebounds. 3.6 assists and 1.6 steals last season.
16. Memphis (from Phoenix): Bennett Stirtz, 22, PG, 6-3, Iowa
A solid floor leader and Drake transfer makes up for a lack of athleticism with high IQ and shooting ability. He averaged 19.8 points on 47.7% shooting (35.8% on threes), 4.4 assists and 2.6 rebounds last season.
17. Oklahoma City (from Philadelphia): Ebuka Okorie, 19, PG, 6-1, Stanford
He excelled as a freshman with his slick ballhandling and scoring ability off the drive. He averaged 23.2 points, 3.6 rebounds and 3.6 assists while shooting 46.5% from the field, 35.4% from deep and 83.2% on free throws.
18. Charlotte (from Orlando): Christian Anderson, 20, PG, 6-1, Texas Tech
A highly skilled floor general with excellent playmaking ability who can score at all three levels. He averaged 18.5 points on 47.2% shooting (41.5% from deep), 7.4 assists 3.6 rebounds and 1.1 steals as a sophomore.
19. Toronto: Allen Graves, 19, PF, 6-8, Santa Clara
Although he only started four of 35 games as a freshman, he has a solid all-around game and plenty of potential. He averaged 11.8 points on 51.2% shooting (41.3% on threes), 6.5 rebounds and 1.8 assists.
20. San Antonio (from Atlanta): Jayden Quaintance, 18, PF-C, 6-9, Kentucky
The Arizona State transfer, a long (7-5 wingspan) and athletic big, only played four games last season after tearing an ACL. In 32 college games, he averaged 8.8 points on 52.9% shooting, 7.5 rebounds and 1.4 assists.
21. Detroit (from Minnesota): Karim Lopez, 19, F, 6-8, New Zealand Breakers
A native of Mexico who played for Joventut Badalona in Spain, he’s a combo forward with solid skills and athleticism. He averaged 11.9 points on 49% shooting, 6.1 rebounds and 1.9 assists last season.
22. Philadelphia (from Houston): Labaron Philon Jr., 20, PG, 6-3, Alabama
He showed his ability as a sophomore to be a lead guard that score from all three levels and set up teammates. He averaged 22 points on 50.1% shooting (39.9% on threes), 5.0 assists and 3.5 rebounds last season.
23. Atlanta (from Cleveland): Zuby Ejiofor, 22, PF-C, 6-8, St. John’s
The Kansas transfer is an active and physical presence in the paint who defends and rebounds well. He averaged 16.3 points on 53.6% shooting, 7.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 2.1 blocks and 1.2 steals as a senior.
24. New York: Cameron Carr, 21, SG, 6-5, Baylor
He’s an explosive, athletic player with a 7-foot wingspan who can get to the rim and finish through contact. He averaged 18.9 points on 49.4% shooting (37.4% from deep), 5.8 rebounds and 2.6 assists as a junior. (Carr’s draft rights reportedly traded to the Lakers.)
25. Lakers: Sergio de Larrea, 20, G, 6-6, Valencia Basket (Spain)
This combo guard from Spain has a well-rounded offensive game, from scoring to playmaking. He averaged 9.7 points, 3.7 assists and 3 rebounds this season while shooting 44.3% from the field and 40.7% on threes. (De Larrea’s draft rights traded to the Knicks.)
26. Denver: Tarris Reed Jr., 22, C, 6-10, Connecticut
An active and physical presence in the post with a 7-4 wingspan, he’s a solid defender and rebounder. He averaged 14.7 points, 9.0 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 2.0 blocks and a steal during his senior season.
27. Boston: Chris Cenac Jr., 19, PF-C, 6-10, Houston
Has potential, athleticism and length (7-5 wingspan) to be a prototypical rim-runner, rebounder and defender. Averaged 9.5 points on 48.5% shooting (33.3% from deep) and 7.9 rebounds as a freshman.
28. Minnesota (from Detroit)
29. Cleveland (from San Antonio)
30. Dallas (from Oklaoma City)
Second round (Wednesday night)
31. New York (from Washington)
32. Memphis (from Indiana)
33. Brooklyn
34. Sacramento
35. San Antonio (from Utah)
36. Clippers (from Memphis)
37. Oklahoma City (from Dallas)
38. Chicago (from New Orleans)
39. Houston (from Chicago)
40. Boston (from Milwaukee)
41. Miami (from Golden State)
42. San Antonio (from Portland)
43. Brooklyn (from Clippers)
44. San Antonio (from Miami)
45. Sacramento (from Charlotte)
46. Orlando
47. Phoenix (from Philadelphia)
48. Dallas (from Phoenix)
49. Denver (from Atlanta)
50. Toronto
51. Washington (from Minnesota)
52. LA Clippers (from Cleveland)
53. Houston
54. Golden State (from the Lakers)
55. New York
56. Chicago (from Denver)
57. Atlanta (from Boston)
58. New Orleans (from Detroit)
59. Minnesota (from San Antonio)
60. Washington (from Oklahoma City)