Jose Alvarado is set to remain with the New York Knicks after helping the franchise win its first NBA championship in 53 years.
Alvarado declined his $4.5 million player option and intends to sign a new three-year deal to return to New York.
The Knicks have not announced the full terms of the deal, but ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Friday on X, formerly Twitter, that the agreement is worth $14 million.
Since the 28-year-old guard was dealt to the Knicks mid-season after being traded by the New Orleans Pelicans, his upcoming deal will be a re-signing rather than a new acquisition. He served as a crucial piece for the eventual 2026 NBA champions, providing elite perimeter defense and a dynamic change-of-pace option off the bench.
What Jose Alvarado’s new contract means for the Knicks
For Alvarado, the decision provides long-term security beyond the one season remaining on his previous contract. For the Knicks, it keeps a trusted rotation piece in place after the franchise won its first NBA championship since 1973.
The former Georgia Tech standout is not a high-usage scorer, but his value to the organization is straightforward. The 6-foot guard brings pressure at the point of attack, quick hands, full-court energy and a willingness to defend with physicality despite his size. His best minutes often come when he speeds up the game, disrupts opposing ballhandlers and gives the second unit a defensive edge.
The deal makes perfect sense for a Knicks team managing a tight budget after a championship season. Facing the NBA’s restrictive apron system, New York must carefully navigate a looming hard cap. By declining his $4.5 million player option to sign a three-year, $14-plus million deal, Alvarado allows the Knicks the flexibility to suppress his immediate salary hit.
As currently projected, the move keeps the Knicks roughly $10 million below the second apron, preserving important roster-building flexibility. Staying under that threshold matters because crossing it would limit New York’s ability to aggregate salaries in future trades and make it harder to round out the bench. Re-signing Alvarado at a manageable number keeps a playoff-tested backup guard in place while helping the Knicks avoid the most restrictive parts of the apron system.
Although the signing is official, some contract specifics remain unclear, including the exact salary structure, guarantees, options and signing mechanism. Still, the basketball logic is clear. New York is prioritizing continuity, defensive edge and bench trust after a title run; Alvarado gives the Knicks all three.