How To Vote Lakers Into 2026 NBA All-Star Game

4 Min Read
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The 2026 NBA All-Star Game will be held in Los Angeles, though it will take place at the Intuit Dome, home of the Los Angeles Clippers, on Feb. 15, and will air on NBC and Peacock.

Despite it being at the Clippers home area, it is the Los Angeles Lakers who will be the more represented L.A. team with Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves both performing at All-Star levels this season while LeBron James will always be one of the biggest vote-getters in the league.

The format for the 2026 NBA All-Star Game has once again changed, with the league adopting a USA vs. World model this year. But fans will still have the opportunity to vote for the 10 nominal “starters,” five from each conference with their vote counting as 50% of the total vote along with players accounting for 25% and a media panel accounting for the last 25%.

This year, however, there isn’t any position designation and fans can simply vote for the five players in each conference they feel are most deserving of making the All-Star Game.

Fan voting for the 2026 All-Star starters will officially begin on Dec. 17 and last through Jan. 14 with starters being announced on NBC on Jan. 19.

All fans with an NBA ID will be able to cast one vote per day either through the NBA App or on NBA.com/vote. If you do not have an NBA ID, you can sign up for one at NBA.com/ID. Additionally, there will be five days in which votes count for triple with those days being Dec. 21, 25 and 30, as well as Jan. 7 and 14.

With this new format, the rosters should shape up into 16 American-born players and eight international players, but of course there is no guarantee the voting will work out that way and should that be the case, Commissioner Adam Silver will select additional All-Stars to fill out the roster.

New USA vs. World All-Star Game format explained

This year’s USA vs. The World format is completely new and will feature three teams of eight players each, two of those having USA-born players and the third with international players. The three teams will face off in a round-robin style tournament featuring four 12-minute games total.

Team A will play Team B in Game 1. The winning team from Game 1 will take on Team C in Game 2, followed by the losing team of Game 1 meeting Team C in Game 3. Following Game 3, the top two teams by record will advance to face each other in the championship game. If all three teams have a 1-1 record after Game 3, the tiebreaker would be point differential.

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Corey Hansford is the Senior Editor for Lakers Nation, as well as a contributor for Dodger Blue, Rams News Wire, and Raiders News Wire. He is a passionate follower of the Los Angeles Lakers, Dallas Cowboys, Los Angeles Dodgers, Chelsea FC, and the UFC. He can usually be seen arguing the merits of Kobe Bryant or cursing the decisions of Jerry Jones. He is also a former producer and associate producer for Sirius XM Sports Radio on both the Fantasy Sports Channel and College Sports Nation. Proud graduate of Long Beach Poly High School and The Real HU, Howard University, with a degree in Broadcast Journalism. Follow him on all social media outlets at @TheeCoreyH.
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