LeBron James signed with Nike in 2003 as a rookie with the Cleveland Cavaliers, securing a $90 million endorsement deal. In 2015, LeBron and Nike converted the deal into the first lifetime contract Nike has ever offered an athlete — reportedly worth over $1 billion over the player's lifetime. LeBron's signature line is the second-most-valuable athlete endorsement in sports, behind only Michael Jordan's.
Signature line history
- Air Zoom Generation (2003) — rookie-year debut signature
- Zoom LeBron II (2004) — featured TPU exoskeleton
- Zoom LeBron III (2005) — heavier basketball profile
- Zoom LeBron IV (2006) — championship-targeted design
- Nike Zoom LeBron V (2007) — with full-length Air Zoom
- Nike Air Max LeBron VII (2009) — Max Air cushioning
- Nike LeBron 8 (2010) — iconic "South Beach" colorway
- Nike LeBron 9, X, XI, 12, 13 — continued evolution
- LeBron 15 (2017) — knit upper era
- LeBron 16 (2018), 17, 18, 19, 20 — modern performance
- LeBron 21 (2023), LeBron 22 (2024), LeBron NXXT Gen
- LeBron Witness series — budget-friendly performance line
- LeBron Soldier series — strap-focused alternate signatures
Iconic colorways and moments
The "South Beach" LeBron 8 (2010) became a cultural phenomenon during LeBron's "The Decision" move to Miami. "MVP" colorways commemorate his four NBA MVP awards (2009, 2010, 2012, 2013). Championship Pack colorways mark his four NBA titles (2012, 2013, 2016, 2020). The "I Promise" and "LeBron Family Foundation" colorways tie to his charitable work.
Cultural and market position
LeBron-branded performance basketball shoes consistently rank as top-3 NBA signature sneakers by on-court usage and retail sales. Retail for flagship LeBron silhouettes typically sits at $200, with mid-tier Witness and Soldier variants at $120-$160.

