The NBA has informed teams across the league of its updated salary cap projections for the next two seasons, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic.

The league now forecasts the salary cap for the 2020-21 season to come in at $116 million, with a luxury tax threshold of $141 million. In the NBA’s previous estimate, the salary cap and luxury tax line came in at $117 million and $142 million, respectively, a drop of $1 million each. The projected lines for 2021-22, $125 million and $151 million, are unchanged from the league’s prior appraisal.

The final working cap numbers won’t be unveiled until the days leading up to next season, after the league calculates it based on basketball-related income earned in 2019-20. It’s not uncommon for there to be negligible differences between the NBA’s forecasted amounts and final salary-cap numbers.

The projected increase in salary cap from this season to next and next to the following season are in line with the most recent spike. The cap is predicted to jump $7 million in 2020-21 and $8 million in 2021-22, roughly the same amount it did from 2018-19 to 2019-20, when the cap went from $101.9 million to $109.1 million.

The biggest season-to-season cap increase in league history came leading up to 2016-17, when income from the league’s new television contracts caused the salary cap to increase by a whopping $24 million.