Foxtel has extended its National Rugby League television rights through 2054 in a deal worth $5.3 billion, locking the Australian pay-TV operator into rugby league for thirty years and removing the sport's marquee media asset from the open market until the middle of the century.
The agreement extends Foxtel's existing partnership with the NRL, which began in the early 1990s, and commits the Rupert Murdoch-backed broadcaster to carrying all 192 regular-season matches plus finals across its cable and Kayo Sports streaming platforms. The deal structure is annual payments of roughly $176 million indexed to inflation, with Foxtel retaining exclusive live simulcast rights and the NRL maintaining digital clip rights for social distribution. The contract includes no opt-out clauses before 2044, according to two people familiar with the terms.
The extension matters because it removes uncertainty for eighteen NRL clubs that rely on central distributions funded largely by broadcast revenue—46% of total league income in the most recent financial year. Club salary caps are indexed to broadcast deals, and this commitment allows the NRL to project player payments and expansion planning through at least two more franchise additions. It also signals Foxtel's belief that live sport remains the last reliable pay-TV moat as entertainment content migrates to global streaming services. The NRL averaged 3.1 million viewers per round in 2024, making it the second-most-watched domestic sport in Australia behind Australian Football League.
For sponsors and team operators, the deal creates a thirty-year window of media distribution certainty but also raises questions about value extraction. The $176 million annual figure represents a 12% increase over the prior contract's average annual value, below the 18% compound growth the AFL secured in its most recent deal with Seven Network and Foxtel. The NRL's decision to lock in three decades of pricing reduces its ability to capture upside from potential streaming bidders—Amazon, Apple, and YouTube have all entered sports rights auctions in other markets over the past eighteen months. The league is trading optionality for stability, a choice that favors incumbent club owners over future value maximization.
The structure also affects franchise valuations. Private equity firms sizing NRL club stakes now have three decades of revenue visibility, which lowers discount rates in financial models. Expect this to accelerate the remaining ownership transitions—six of eighteen clubs are currently in sale or recapitalization processes, including South Sydney and Wests Tigers. Family offices that passed on NRL exposure in 2022 due to broadcast uncertainty will revisit. The deal also positions the NRL to add a second New Zealand franchise and a Perth team by 2028, as expansion fees can now be underwritten against locked broadcast income.
Watch for Foxtel's next move in AFL rights negotiations, which come up for renewal in 2031. The company has now committed 73% of its projected sports budget through mid-century to rugby league, leaving limited room for competitive AFL bidding unless parent company News Corp approves a capital injection. Also watch the NRL's sponsor renewal cycle—naming rights partner Telstra and kit supplier Canterbury both have contracts expiring in 2026, and both will use the broadcast extension as leverage to negotiate lower fees, arguing the league sacrificed upside for certainty.
The deal was signed at NRL headquarters in Sydney on Tuesday morning, with Foxtel CEO Patrick Delany and NRL chairman Peter V'landys present but no announcement of which Foxtel executive will oversee the thirty-year relationship.