Central Division (NBA)
The Central Division is one of the three divisions in the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball Association. The division consists of five teams, the Chicago Bulls, the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Detroit Pistons, the Indiana Pacers, and the Milwaukee Bucks. All teams except the Cavaliers are former Midwest Division teams; thus, the Central Division now largely resembles the Midwest Division in the 1970s.
An earlier five-team Central Division previously existed for the [1949–50 National Basketball Association|NBA season|1949–50 season] as one of three divisions in the NBA, along with the Western and Eastern divisions. The current Central Division was created at the start of the 1970–71 season, when the league expanded from 14 to 17 teams with the addition of the Buffalo Braves, the Cleveland Cavaliers, and the Portland Trail Blazers. The league realigned itself into two conferences, the Western Conference and the Eastern Conference, with two divisions in each conference. The Central Division began with four inaugural members, the Atlanta Hawks, the Baltimore Bullets, the Cincinnati Royals, and the Cavaliers. The Hawks were moved from the Western Division, while the Bullets and the Royals were moved from the Eastern Division.
Thirteen NBA champions came from the Central Division. The Bulls won six championships, the Pistons won three, the Bucks won two, and the Bullets and Cavaliers won one each. All of the teams, except the 1977–78 Bullets and the 2003–04 Pistons, were division champions. In the 2005–06 season, all five teams from the division qualified for the playoffs. Overall, the Bucks have won thirteen Central Division titles, followed by the Bulls and Pistons with nine division titles each. The Central Division has the highest percentage of teams that have won a championship, with four out of the five teams having won an NBA title. The Pacers are the lone exception, although they did advance to the NBA Finals in 2000, and are the current Eastern Conference champions and played in the 2025 NBA Finals.
Since the 2021–22 season, the Central Division champion has received the Wayne Embry Trophy, named after Hall of Famer Wayne Embry who played for the Bucks in the 1968–69 NBA season.
2025–26 standings
Notesc – Clinched home court advantage for the conference playoffspi – Clinched play-in tournament spot x – Clinched playoff spotTeams
;Notes- denotes an expansion team.
Former teams
;Notes- denotes an expansion team.
- denotes a team that merged from the American Basketball Association.
- The Charlotte NBA franchise was inactive from 2002 to 2004 upon the relocation of the Hornets to New Orleans. A new franchise, initially known as the Bobcats, began play in the 2004–05 season. In 2013, the New Orleans Hornets were renamed the Pelicans, and the following season, the Bobcats were renamed the Hornets, acquiring the history and records of the 1988–2002 Hornets while retroactively designating the Pelicans as an expansion team.
Team timeline
DateFormat = yyyy
ImageSize = width:800 height:auto barincrement:25
Period = from:1970 till:2021
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
PlotArea = right:20 left:20 bottom:20 top:0
Colors = id:barcolor value:rgb
id:line value:black
id:bg value:white
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width:15 textcolor:black shift: anchor:from fontsize:s
bar:1 color:tan2 from:1970 till:2004 text:Atlanta Hawks
bar:2 color:tan2 from:1970 till:1978 text:Baltimore / Capital / Washington Bullets
bar:3 color:tan2 from:1970 till:1972 text:Cincinnati Royals
bar:4 color:tan1 from:1970 till:end text:Cleveland Cavaliers
bar:5 color:tan2 from:1972 till:1980 text:Houston Rockets
bar:6 color:tan2 from:1974 till:1979 text:New Orleans Jazz
bar:7 color:tan2 from:1976 till:1980 text:San Antonio Spurs
bar:8 color:tan1 from:1978 till:end text:Detroit Pistons
bar:9 color:tan1 from:1979 till:end text:Indiana Pacers
bar:10 color:tan1 from:1980 till:end text:Chicago Bulls
bar:11 color:tan1 from:1980 till:end text:Milwaukee Bucks
bar:12 color:tan2 from:1989 till:1990 text:Orlando Magic
bar:13 color:tan2 from:1990 till:2002 text:Charlotte Hornets
bar:14 color:tan2 from:1995 till:2004 text:Toronto Raptors
bar:15 color:tan2 from:2002 till:2004 text:New Orleans Hornets
ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:2 start:1970
Wayne Embry Trophy
Beginning with the 2021–22 season, the Central Division champion has received the Wayne Embry Trophy. As with the other division championship trophies, it is named after one of the African American pioneers from NBA history. Wayne Embry became the NBA's first African American general manager when he was hired by the Milwaukee Bucks in 1972. The Embry Trophy consists of a crystal ball.Division champions
Titles by team
| Team | Titles | Season won |
| Milwaukee Bucks | 13 | ,,,,,,,,,,,, |
| Detroit Pistons | 9 | ,,,,,,,, |
| Chicago Bulls | 8 | ,,,,,,, |
| Cleveland Cavaliers | 8 | ,,,,,,, |
| Indiana Pacers | 6 | ,,,,, |
| Baltimore / Capital / Washington Bullets^ | 5 | ,,,, |
| Atlanta Hawks^ | 3 | ,, |
| San Antonio Spurs^ | 2 | , |
| Houston Rockets^ | 1 |
1949–50 season
Before the 1949–50 season, the BAA merged with the NBL and was renamed NBA. The number of teams competed increased from 12 teams to 17 teams and the league realigned itself to three divisions, creating the Central Division. The division consisted of five teams, the Chicago Stags, the Fort Wayne Pistons, the Minneapolis Lakers, the Rochester Royals and the St. Louis Bombers. All five teams joined from the Western Division. The Minneapolis Lakers won the Central Division title. The division was disbanded before the 1950–51 season, after six teams folded and the league realigned itself back into two divisions. The Stags and the Bombers folded, while the other three teams returned to the Western Division.| ^ | Denotes team that won the NBA championships |
| * | Denotes team that qualified for the NBA Playoffs |