The Toronto Raptors are once again expected to explore trade options involving Jakob Poeltl, according to NBA insider Evan Sidery, who reported on Thursday that the franchise will revisit moving the veteran center’s contract this offseason.
Poeltl’s long-term deal has become one of the key financial pressure points for Toronto’s roster construction. He is entering the final guaranteed year of his current structure at $19.5 million for 2026-27, before a larger extension escalates into $27.3 million, $29.5 million, and $27.3 million through 2029-30.
The contract structure has directly influenced Toronto’s roster flexibility, especially at the center position, limiting the team’s ability to aggressively upgrade around its core.
Across the 2025-26 regular season, Poeltl appeared in 46 games and started 44 of them, averaging 10.7 points, 7.0 rebounds, and shooting 70 percent from the field. His efficiency inside the paint remained among the most reliable on the roster, anchored by elite finishing rather than perimeter spacing.
In the playoffs, his role shifted into a lower-usage but efficient interior presence. Over seven postseason games, he posted 7.0 points and 6.0 rebounds in 19.1 minutes per game, maintaining strong efficiency at 64.5 percent shooting.
Toronto’s offensive structure leaned heavily on perimeter creation from Scottie Barnes and RJ Barrett, both of whom carried 24.1 points per game in the playoffs. That backcourt-forward blend reduced Poeltl’s offensive involvement but emphasized his defensive positioning and screening value.
Still, roster balance has remained a recurring issue for the Raptors. Barnes added 8.6 assists per game in the postseason, while Immanuel Quickley’s shot creation and Jamal Shead’s playmaking gave Toronto multiple ball-handling options that reduced reliance on traditional interior scoring sets.
Poeltl’s value profile remains clear in the analytics. He provides efficient finishing, rim protection, and defensive rebounding, but his contract trajectory has made him a difficult fit in a cap environment that already includes multiple long-term extensions.
League executives increasingly view Toronto’s situation as a “cap efficiency problem,” where production does not fully align with future financial commitments. That context is why trade discussions around Poeltl have resurfaced ahead of the offseason.