A lottery protected pick in the NBA is a traded draft pick that the original team keeps if it lands in the lottery, which usually means picks 1 through 14. If the pick falls outside that protected range, it goes to the team that acquired it.

How it works

  • Teams often add protection when trading future picks to reduce risk.
  • “Lottery protected” is one of the most common protections because it shields the original team from giving up a very valuable pick.
  • If the pick is protected and the condition is triggered, the receiving team usually gets a later-year pick instead, depending on the trade terms.

Simple example

If Team A trades a “lottery protected” first-round pick to Team B, and Team A’s season is bad enough that the pick becomes a lottery pick, Team A keeps it. If the pick ends up at No. 15 or later, Team B gets it.

Why teams use it

  • For the team trading the pick: it protects them if they end up worse than expected.
  • For the team receiving the pick: it still gives them a chance to get a future asset, often with fallback compensation if the protection applies.

Quick definition

A lottery protected pick = “you get this pick only if it is outside the lottery.”

If you want, I can also explain top-10 protected, top-3 protected, and unprotected picks in the same way.