TheNational Basketball Association All-Star Game is the annualall-star game hosted each February by theNational Basketball Association (NBA) and showcases 24 of the league'sstar players. Since 2022, it was held on the third Sunday of February, the same day that theDaytona 500 was held usually the week after theSuper Bowl. It is the featured event ofNBA All-Star Weekend, a three-day event which goes from Friday to Sunday. The All-Star Game was first played at theBoston Garden on March 2, 1951.
Thestarting lineup for each squad is selected by a combination of fan, player, and media voting,[1] whilehead coaches choose thereserves,[2] seven players from their respective conferences, so each side has a 12-man roster. Coaches are not allowed to vote for their own players. If a selected player cannot participate because of injury, theNBA commissioner selects a replacement.
Traditionally, the NBA All-Star Game pitted the top players from both theEastern Division/Eastern Conference and theWestern Division/Western Conference. From2018 to2023, the teams were represented by the leading vote-getter from each conference and each player regardless of conference was chosen to either team via a draft.[3][4] The teams also play for a charity of their choice to help the games remain competitive.[5]
Thehead coach of the team with the best record in each conference is chosen to lead their respective conference in the All-Star Game, with a prohibition against consecutive appearances.[2] Known as the "Riley Rule", it was created after perennially successfulLos Angeles Lakers head coachPat Riley earned the right to coach the Western Conference team eight times in nine seasons between 1982 and 1990. The coach of the team with the next best record gets to coach instead.
To regain public attention to the league, Cohen suggested the league to host an exhibition game featuring the league's best players, similar toMajor League Baseball'sAll-Star Game.[6] Although most people, including Podoloff, were pessimistic about the idea, Brown remained confident that it would be a success, and he offered to host the game and to cover all the expenses or potential losses incurred from the game.[7]
In 2010, the NBA All-Star Game set the attendance record for a basketball game with 108,713 people attending atCowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. This shattered the existing attendance record previously held atFord Field on December 13, 2003, when 78,129 attendees watchedMichigan State playKentucky.[9]
The 2017 All-Star Weekend was originally awarded to Charlotte, North Carolina. On March 23, 2016, North Carolina passedHouse Bill 2, also known as a "bathroom bill", which was seen as discriminatory against transgender persons. As a result, the NBA announced that it would move the game to another city if the bill was not repealed or revised. After North Carolina took no action, on July 21, 2016, the NBA announced that the 2017 game would be moved to New Orleans. In March 2017, after several provisions of the bill were partially repealed, the NBA awarded the 2019 All-Star Weekend to Charlotte.
On October 3, 2017, the NBA andNBPA announced changes to the game format, starting in2018. Instead of being divided by conference, the top vote leaders for each conference would be team captains and hold a draft to choose among the rest of the starters and reserves, regardless of conference.[5]
On October 25, 2023, the NBA brought back the conference-based format for the2024 All-Star Game. The untimed fourth quarter (known asElam Ending), which had been in used since2020 in honor ofKobe Bryant,[11] was also removed. However, the charity aspect was retained, with the team that scores the most points in each quarter winning a cash prize that went to their chosen charity.[12]
A new format for the2025 All-Star Game featured a mini-tournament with four teams of eight players: three teams featuring 24 NBA All-Star selections, and a fourth team composed of the winning team from theRising Stars Challenge, an exhibition game pitting a mix of NBA rookies and sophomores plus standouts from theNBA G League. Each team was named after the analysts ofInside the NBA. The head coaches in the tournament came from the teams who had the best record in their respective conference through February 2, with the assistant coaches from either team taking over the Rising Stars team and the remaining All-Star team. Three games, each to 40 points, were played.[13]
The tournament format was retained for the2026 All-Star Game, but the three All-Star teams now consist of a "World" team consisting of eight All-Starsborn outside the U.S. and two "U.S." teams consisting of 16 All-Stars born in the United States. In the updated format, Team A plays Team B in Game 1. The winner of that game plays Team C in Game 2, and the losing team plays Team C in Game 3. The top two teams after three games would play in the championship game, with the tiebreaker determined by point differential in the first three games. A modified voting format was also introduced, with All-Stars getting selected regardless of position. If the voting does not result in the selection of 16 "U.S." All-Stars and eight "World" All-Stars, then the commissioner will select additional All-Stars in order to reach the minimum of eight players each.[14]
The starting five from each conference consists of threefrontcourt players and twoguards, selected by a combination of fan, player, and media voting. In 2017, the NBA moved from a pure fan vote to a weighted process wherein fan voting accounts for 50%, with player and media voting account for 25% each.[1][15] Prior to2013, fans selected twoforwards and onecenter instead of generic frontcourt players.[16] The NBA in2003 began offering All-Star ballots in three languages—English, Spanish and Chinese—for fan voting of the starters.[17] Starting with the 2026 game, voting will no longer be restricted to position.[14]
NBA coaches vote for the reserves for their respective conferences, but they cannot choose players from their own team. Each coach selects two guards, three frontcourt players and two wild cards, with each selected player ranked in order of preference within each category. If a multi-position player is to be selected, coaches are encouraged to vote for the player at the position that is "most advantageous for the All-Star team", regardless of where the player is listed on the All-Star ballot or the position he is listed in box scores.[18] If a player is unavailable for the game due to injury, theNBA commissioner selects a replacement for the roster. If the replacement is for a fan-selected starter, the All-Star Game coach chooses the replacement in the starting lineup, and is not limited to the commissioner's addition to the roster.[19]
Multiple All-Star players can be chosen from one team, with the record being four. This has occurred nine times, the first such instance being in1962, when four players each from theBoston Celtics andLos Angeles Lakers were chosen. The most recent game with four All-Star players from one team was theGolden State Warriors in the2018 game.[20][21]
The game is played under normal NBA rules with some differences. Since the starting All-Stars are selected by fans, players, and media, players sometimes start the game at atypical positions. For instance, in the2007 game,Kobe Bryant andTracy McGrady were chosen as the startingWestern Conference guards. As both players normally playshooting guard, Bryant started the game as apoint guard. Gameplay usually involves players attempting spectacularslam dunks andalley oops and defensive effort is limited. The final score is generally much higher than a competitive NBA game.
If the score is close, the fourth quarter becomes more competitive. The fourth quarter was changed in2020 to use theElam Ending. In normal Elam Ending rules, the game clock is turned off with four minutes remaining and a target score is set; whoever reaches the target wins the game. In 2020, the NBA took the score at the end of three quarters and added 24 points (in honor of Kobe Bryant, who had beenkilled in a helicopter crash a month prior). With Team Giannis leading Team LeBron 133–124 at the end of the third quarter, the target score was 157 points, and Team LeBron won the contest.
The player introductions are accompanied by significantfanfare, including lighting effects, dance music, DJ's, elaborate portable stages, andpyrotechnics. Specialuniforms are designed for the game each year, usually red for the Western Conference and blue for the Eastern Conference. From 1997 to 2002, players could wear their normal team uniforms. The "host conference" also traditionally has light uniforms, except from 2010 to 2014. In the past, players who wore the same number were given the option to pick a different numeral. For example,Patrick Ewing, who normally wore #33, ended up wearing #3 early in his career asLarry Bird also had that number. Since 1997, players can keep their uniform numbers. A major recording artist typically sings "O Canada" and "The Star-Spangled Banner" prior to tipoff.
List of each All-Star Game, the venue at which it was played, and theGame MVP. Parenthesized numbers indicate multiple times that venue, city, or player has occurred as of that instance (e.g. "Michael Jordan (2)" in 1996 indicates that was his second All-Star MVP award). As of the 2024 All-Star Game (the 2023–24 NBA season)[update], the Eastern Conference leads with a record of 38 wins and 29 losses.
* – a city without an NBA team in play during that calendar year.
** – a game played at the "third" Madison Square Garden on 8th Avenue between 49th and 50th Streets, site of the first three NBA All-Star Games played in Madison Square Garden (1954, 1955 and 1968).
*** – a game played at the "fourth" (as of 2017) Madison Square Garden that runs from 31st to 33rd Streets from 8th to west of 7th Avenues above the western half of Penn Station in Manhattan that opened in February 1968, approximately one month after the 1968 game was played in the "old" MSG.
† – an NBA All-Star Game that is held at anNFL orMLB stadium.
§ – a stadium or arena whose venue name has since changed AND the venue has hosted a subsequent NBA All-Star Game under the alternate name.
Despite playing inLos Angeles since 1984, theClippers never hosted an All-Star Game individually until 2026 with the game set to play atIntuit Dome inInglewood. The team previously co-hosted the 2004, 2011 and 2018 games with theLakers atCrypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center), due to being co-tenants of the arena. Its previous incarnation, theBuffalo Braves, never hosted an All-Star Game.
Market Square Arena in Indianapolis andThe Summit inHouston were the only former NBA arenas to host All-Star Saturday but not the All-Star Game as the latter took place in bigger venues within their respective cities, in this case theHoosier Dome and theAstrodome.
‡ – the first game played under the Elam scoring format, where instead of a time limit, the fourth quarter would end when either team reached the target score, defined as 24, in honor ofKobe Bryant, plus whichever team had more points after three quarters. Team Giannis led 133–124 after three quarters, so the target score was 157.Anthony Davis hit a walk-off free throw to win it.
The All-Star Game is the featured event ofAll-Star Weekend, and it is held on a Sunday night. All-Star Weekend also features popular exhibition games and competitions featuring NBA players, celebrities, and alumni as well as players from theWomen's National Basketball Association (WNBA) andNBA G League (G League).
^The Slam Dunk Contest and Three-Point Contest, among other side events, took place atLucas Oil Stadium.
^Although Brooklyn has not hosted an All-Star Game (Barclays Center did host the Rising Stars Challenge and All-Star Saturday events in 2015), New York City has hosted at thethird andcurrent Madison Square Gardens, both home to theNew York Knicks.
^Although San Francisco has not hosted an All-Star Game, Daly City and Oakland each hosted, both previous homes to theGolden State Warriors.
^Beck, Howard (October 24, 2012)."The All-Star Center is Officially Extinct".New York Times. RetrievedOctober 24, 2012.The N.B.A., bowing to new realities in a multi-positional era, has eliminated "center" from its All-Star ballots for the 2012–13 season. Instead, fans will vote for three frontcourt players and two guards.