WNBA free agency 2026: Tracking every move as it happens The WNBA season is right around the corner, and free agency is finally here. The free agency negotiation period starts on Wednesday, April 8th, and teams can begin signing free agents to new contracts on Saturday, April 11.
Before this, qualifying offers and core player designations were sent out on April 6th and 7th.
Reserved players are players who are out of contract with three years of service or fewer. If they receive a Reserved qualifying offer, those players are subject to that team’s exclusive negotiating rights. If the club declines to offer the player a contract, they become unrestricted free agents.
Restricted free agents are players with at least four years of service whose contract has expired, and who receive a qualifying offer from their previous team. Those players can negotiate with other teams, but their original team can match any offer.
A Core Designation is the WNBA’s version of a franchise tag. An organization can have one veteran free agent whom they have cored on their roster — and thus offered a fully guaranteed one-year deal worth the supermax. If a player receives a Core Designation, they can only sign or negotiate a contract with that team during the free agency period.
April 8: Negotiations begin
This page will be updated as information is shared.
April 7: Angel Reese traded, teams extend qualifying offers
The Chicago Sky trade Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream in exchange for the Dream’s first-round picks in 2027 and 2028. As part of the trade, Atlanta also receives the right to swap second-round picks with Chicago in 2028.
The Atlanta Dream extended a Reserved qualifying offer to Sika Koné.
The Portland Fire extended a Core qualifying offer to Bridget Carleton
The Washington Mystics extended a Reserved qualifying offer to Bernadett Határ.
The Portland Fire extended a Reserved qualifying offer to Haley Jones.
The Minnesota Lynx extended a Core qualifying offer to Napheesa Collier.
#WNBA #free #agency #Tracking #move
The WNBA season is right around the corner, and free agency is finally here. The free agency negotiation period starts on Wednesday, April 8th, and teams can begin signing free agents to new contracts on Saturday, April 11.
Before this, qualifying offers and core player designations were sent out on April 6th and 7th.
Reserved players are players who are out of contract with three years of service or fewer. If they receive a Reserved qualifying offer, those players are subject to that team’s exclusive negotiating rights. If the club declines to offer the player a contract, they become unrestricted free agents.
Restricted free agents are players with at least four years of service whose contract has expired, and who receive a qualifying offer from their previous team. Those players can negotiate with other teams, but their original team can match any offer.
A Core Designation is the WNBA’s version of a franchise tag. An organization can have one veteran free agent whom they have cored on their roster — and thus offered a fully guaranteed one-year deal worth the supermax. If a player receives a Core Designation, they can only sign or negotiate a contract with that team during the free agency period.
April 8: Negotiations begin
This page will be updated as information is shared.
April 7: Angel Reese traded, teams extend qualifying offers
The Chicago Sky trade Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream in exchange for the Dream’s first-round picks in 2027 and 2028. As part of the trade, Atlanta also receives the right to swap second-round picks with Chicago in 2028.
The Atlanta Dream extended a Reserved qualifying offer to Sika Koné.
The Portland Fire extended a Core qualifying offer to Bridget Carleton
The Washington Mystics extended a Reserved qualifying offer to Bernadett Határ.
The Portland Fire extended a Reserved qualifying offer to Haley Jones.
The Minnesota Lynx extended a Core qualifying offer to Napheesa Collier.



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