NBA First Overall Picks By Year

Every NBA season ends with one team cutting down the nets, but every offseason begins with a different kind of prize: the number one overall pick. It is the most valuable single selection in the sport, the reward for a rough season and a lucky lottery, and a chance to land a franchise-altering talent. Some of the names on this list became the greatest players in basketball history. Others became cautionary tales.

The first pick has been awarded every year since 1947, and the roll call doubles as a history of the league itself: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson, Hakeem Olajuwon, Shaquille O’Neal, Tim Duncan, LeBron James. Eleven of these players went on to win the NBA’s Most Valuable Player Award, proof of just how much a top pick can change a team’s fortunes.

The chart below lists the number one overall pick for every recent year, the franchises and colleges that produce them most, and the records worth knowing. Take a look, then we’ll get into the history.

NBA FIRST OVERALL PICKS
Every No. 1 pick, plus the records

1947
first NBA draft
11
went on to win MVP
6
Cavaliers, most by team
6
Duke, most by college

No. 1 overall picks, modern era
Year Player Team From
2026 To be selected on draft night, June 23
2025 Cooper Flagg Dallas Mavericks Duke
2024 Zaccharie Risacher Atlanta Hawks France
2023 Victor Wembanyama San Antonio Spurs France
2022 Paolo Banchero Orlando Magic Duke
2021 Cade Cunningham Detroit Pistons Oklahoma State
2020 Anthony Edwards Minnesota Timberwolves Georgia
2019 Zion Williamson New Orleans Pelicans Duke
2018 Deandre Ayton Phoenix Suns Arizona
2017 Markelle Fultz Philadelphia 76ers Washington
2016 Ben Simmons Philadelphia 76ers LSU
2015 Karl-Anthony Towns Minnesota Timberwolves Kentucky
2014 Andrew Wiggins Cleveland Cavaliers Kansas
2013 Anthony Bennett Cleveland Cavaliers UNLV
2012 Anthony Davis New Orleans Hornets Kentucky
2011 Kyrie Irving Cleveland Cavaliers Duke
2010 John Wall Washington Wizards Kentucky
2009 Blake Griffin LA Clippers Oklahoma
2008 Derrick Rose Chicago Bulls Memphis
2007 Greg Oden Portland Trail Blazers Ohio State
2006 Andrea Bargnani Toronto Raptors Italy
2005 Andrew Bogut Milwaukee Bucks Utah
2004 Dwight Howard Orlando Magic high school
2003 LeBron James Cleveland Cavaliers high school
The 2026 No. 1 pick will be added after the June 23 draft. Teams are listed as they were named at the time of the pick.

Landmark No. 1 picks of the past
Year Player Team
1969 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Milwaukee Bucks
1979 Magic Johnson Los Angeles Lakers
1984 Hakeem Olajuwon Houston Rockets
1992 Shaquille O’Neal Orlando Magic
1997 Tim Duncan San Antonio Spurs

No. 1 pick records and facts
Most No. 1 picks, franchise Cleveland Cavaliers, 6
Most No. 1 picks, college Duke, 6
No. 1 picks who won MVP 11 players
First high schooler taken No. 1 Kwame Brown, 2001
First international No. 1 (no US play) Yao Ming, 2002

The NBA draft has been held every year since 1947. The number one pick is awarded to the winner of the draft lottery, which since 1985 has given the league’s weaker teams a weighted chance at the top selection. The 11 No. 1 picks to win MVP include record six-time winner Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and four-time winner LeBron James.

How a team lands the first pick

The number one overall pick is not simply handed to the worst team in the league, at least not anymore. Since 1985, the order at the top of the draft has been decided by the NBA draft lottery, a weighted random drawing among the teams that missed the playoffs. The worse a team’s record, the better its odds, but the lottery means the top pick is never guaranteed. The 2025 draft was a perfect illustration: the Dallas Mavericks jumped up to claim the first pick despite having just a 1.8 percent chance, then used it on Duke star Cooper Flagg.

This system exists to discourage teams from deliberately losing, or “tanking,” to secure a generational prospect. It does not eliminate the temptation entirely, but it adds a layer of chance that has reshaped franchises overnight. Winning the lottery can turn a struggling team into a contender in a single night, which is exactly why draft night draws such enormous attention every June.

The picks that defined the league

Look back through the list and you are really reading a history of the NBA’s defining stars. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, taken first in 1969, went on to become the record six-time MVP and the league’s all-time leading scorer for nearly four decades. Magic Johnson arrived as the top pick in 1979 and immediately transformed the Lakers into a dynasty. Hakeem Olajuwon (1984), Shaquille O’Neal (1992), and Tim Duncan (1997) each anchored championship teams and walked into the Hall of Fame.

And then there is LeBron James, the 2003 number one pick out of a high school in Akron, who arrived with impossible hype and somehow exceeded it, winning four MVPs and four titles while rewriting the scoring record himself. These are the outcomes every lottery-winning team dreams about: not just a good player, but a cornerstone who changes everything. Eleven number one picks have won at least one MVP, a remarkable hit rate for a single draft slot.

When the first pick goes wrong

For every LeBron, though, the list carries a cautionary tale, because the number one pick is a gamble as much as a gift. The most cited example is Anthony Bennett, taken first by Cleveland in 2013, who lasted just four NBA seasons and is often called the biggest draft bust in league history. Greg Oden, picked ahead of Kevin Durant in 2007, saw a promising career destroyed by chronic knee injuries. Kwame Brown, the first high schooler ever taken first overall in 2001, never lived up to the billing.

These misses are a reminder that projecting teenagers and young prospects is genuinely hard, and that injuries, fit, and development can derail even the most certain-looking pick. The pressure on a number one selection is immense, and not every player can carry it. That risk is part of what makes draft night so compelling: nobody truly knows which category a pick will fall into for years.

The franchises and colleges that produce them

A few names recur at the top of the draft. The Cleveland Cavaliers have made the most number one selections of any franchise, six in all, a group that includes LeBron James in 2003, Kyrie Irving in 2011, Anthony Bennett in 2013, and Andrew Wiggins in 2014, along with Brad Daugherty and Austin Carr in earlier eras. On the college side, Duke leads all schools with six number one picks, from Art Heyman in 1963 through Kyrie Irving, Zion Williamson, Paolo Banchero, and most recently Cooper Flagg. Kentucky is next among colleges, a reflection of how the sport’s top programs funnel talent to the top of the draft.

The list has also grown more international over time. Yao Ming became the first player with no US experience to go first overall in 2002, and France has produced three of the most recent number one picks, including the generational Victor Wembanyama in 2023. It is a sign of how thoroughly basketball talent has globalized, with the top pick now just as likely to come from Europe as from a blue-blood American college.

Final Word

The number one overall pick is the NBA’s annual lottery ticket, a single selection that has delivered Kareem, Magic, Shaq, Duncan, and LeBron, and also a handful of busts that never found their footing. The full list, stretching back to 1947, is a year-by-year map of where the league’s hope has been placed each summer, and which bets paid off. Eleven of these players became MVPs, while others became reminders of how uncertain the whole exercise is.

As the next draft unfolds, a new name will join the list, and a new fan base will allow itself to dream. Whether that pick becomes the next franchise cornerstone or the next what-if is a story that takes years to write. If you want more on how the league’s biggest individual honors are decided, see our look at the NBA Finals MVP winners by year.