The Golden State Valkyries are worth $1 billion, per CNBC's 2026 franchise valuations released Tuesday. The franchise launched fourteen months ago.
No WNBA team had crossed ten figures before. The Valkyries did it in their second season, faster than any North American women's pro sports franchise and ahead of the timeline for most NBA expansion entries. The New York Liberty, the league's previous valuation leader, sat at $260 million in 2023. The Las Vegas Aces, two-time defending champions when the Valkyries tipped off, were estimated near $180 million that same year. CNBC's methodology weighs revenue multiples, market demographics, venue control, and comparable transactions. The Valkyries benefit from all four.
Three structural advantages explain the gap. First, the Chase Center lease. The Valkyries share the building with the Warriors under terms that give them premium dates, full ancillary revenue on concessions and parking, and access to the venue's corporate hospitality infrastructure. Second, the ownership structure. Joe Lacob's group paid a reported $50 million expansion fee in 2023, then built a front office that poached executives from Nike, the U.S. Soccer Federation, and two NBA teams. The Valkyries sold out their season-ticket allotment—roughly 11,200 seats per game—before the roster was announced. Third, the media timing. The franchise launched six months after the WNBA signed its new rights deal with ESPN, Amazon, and NBC, a package worth $2.2 billion over eleven years and triple the prior contract. Valuations track rights fees. The Valkyries entered at the inflection point.
The number changes the sale comp for other franchises. The Toronto expansion bid, expected to be awarded this summer, will likely command a fee near $100 million, double what Golden State paid. Portland and Philadelphia groups are circling. If the Valkyries are worth $1 billion after one season of middling on-court results—they finished 14-26 and missed the playoffs—then a New York or Los Angeles franchise with a title window trades closer to $400-500 million in a private transaction. The Liberty, controlled by Joe Tsai, aren't for sale, but their next capital raise or minority stake will reprice the Liberty's enterprise value north of $600 million. Investors building models around 6-8x revenue multiples six months ago are now penciling 10-12x for top-market teams.
Sponsor budgets are adjusting in parallel. The Valkyries have jersey patch, court naming, and founding partner deals that aggregate near $30 million annually, per two people briefed on the terms. That's low NBA money but an order of magnitude above WNBA historical norms. Brands that entered women's basketball at cost-per-impression rates assuming 3,000-5,000 fans per game are now paying for buildings that hold 18,000 and local TV windows that pull better numbers than MLS in the same markets. The Chase Center deal includes designation as a Visa, Google Cloud, and JPMorgan partner property, the same sponsors that anchor Warriors activations. The Valkyries aren't getting equivalent cash, but they're getting the same CBRE hospitality team and the same brand safety clearance.
The coaching and player salary cap hasn't caught up. The WNBA's $1.46 million team salary cap in 2026 is 0.15% of the Valkyries' valuation. For context, NBA teams operating near the luxury tax spend roughly 4-5% of franchise value on payroll. If the Valkyries ran an NBA-equivalent payroll structure, they'd be clearing $40-50 million for the roster. The next collective bargaining negotiation, set for 2027, will test whether players can extract a revenue share that reflects franchise enterprise value or whether owners can maintain the current margin structure while selling to the next class of buyers at CNBC's new comps.
Watch the Toronto bidding this summer—three groups are positioning, and the expansion fee will set the floor for secondary trades. The Liberty's next funding round, expected before the 2027 season, will clarify whether New York can trade above $600 million without a title. And the coaching salary disclosures: the Valkyries' head coach, Natalie Nakase, is making a reported $700,000 annually, roughly half what a equivalent NBA assistant earns but triple the WNBA median. If valuations hold, expect the next free-agent coaching cycle to breach $1 million guaranteed for proven winners.
The Valkyries lost money in year one. Most expansion franchises do. But the CNBC number means Lacob's group could sell tomorrow, return 20x in twenty-four months, and leave the buyer with a plausible path to cash flow positive by year five. That's the signal the market needed.
The takeaway
The Valkyries' $1B valuation—achieved in one season—resets WNBA expansion fees, franchise trade comps, and CBA leverage for 2027.
wnbafranchise valuationgolden state valkyrieswomens sportsexpansion economicsmedia rights
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