NBA All-Star 2026 takes place Friday, February 13 through Sunday, February 15 in the Los Angeles area, with the Intuit Dome (home of the LA Clippers) as the main venue. Over three days, the league presents the traditional All-Star Weekend with the Celebrity Game, Rising Stars, Saturday contests and a revamped format for the All-Star Game.
If you live in the United States, here are confirmed times in Eastern Time (ET) and how to watch it on TV and the Internet.
Friday: Celebrities and Rising Stars

NBA Celebrity Game
Date: Friday, February 13
Time (ET): 7:00 p.m.
Location: Kia Forum (Inglewood, CA)
TV/Streaming in the U.S.: ESPN and Disney+
The celebrity game opens the weekend with entertainment figures, former players and athletes from other sports.
Rising Stars (promising young NBA and G-League)
Time (ET): 9:00 p.m.
Headquarters: Intuit Dome
Streaming in USA: Peacock
There are 28 players divided into four teams.
The format is by points objective: semifinals at 40 points and finals at 25 points.
Saturday: All-Star Contests

Date: Saturday, February 14
Start time (ET): 5:00 p.m.
TV/Streaming in the U.S.: NBC and Peacock
Includes:
Three-pointer contest
Shooting Stars
Dunk contest (with new champion assured, since Mac McClung is not participating).
Subsequent schedules depend on the duration of each competition.
The league presents the traditional All-Star weekend
QuéOnnda.com
Sunday: All-Star Game (new format)

Date: Sunday, February 15
Time (ET): 5:00 p.m.
U.S. TV: NBC and Telemundo
Streaming: Peacock
The NBA implements an innovative format for the 2026 All-Star Game:
Three teams (two comprised of U.S. players and one of international players), each with eight players.
They face each other in 12-minute matches; the two best teams play a 12-minute final.
In total, the show adds up to 48 minutes of effective play.
NBA All-Star 2026 includes broadcast on Telemundo, expanding access in Spanish.
In addition, the presence of international players reinforces the connection with the Latino audience, which represents a growing portion of NBA fans in cities such as Los Angeles, Miami, Houston and New York.
For more information, visit QuéOnnda.com.


