The New York Liberty is worth $1.5 billion, according to Forbes, making it the most valuable women's sports franchise globally and the first to breach $1 billion. The club, owned by Joe Tsai's Alibaba fortune and housed in Barclays Center, sits 40 percent above the next-closest peer. No NWSL club breaks $200 million in the same methodology.
The valuation reflects three structural advantages. First, the Liberty controls its arena calendar at Barclays, sharing nothing with a landlord—pure incremental margin on every playoff gate and luxury suite night. Second, the team benefits from crossover with Tsai's Brooklyn Nets operations: shared front office, integrated sponsorship inventory, and access to the same media rights negotiators who extracted $2.66 billion annually from the NBA's recent national deals. Third, New York market size. The Liberty draws corporate partners who need metro exposure and allocate against Manhattan CPMs, not league-average ones. Brands pay a premium to activate courtside in Brooklyn the same way they pay to wrap the Garden.
The timing matters because WNBA expansion fees just hit $50 million for the Golden State franchise awarded in October. If a new team costs $50 million and the Liberty trades at $1.5 billion, the implied multiple is 30x—high even for scarcity assets, but defensible if you believe the next media cycle doubles rights fees and the player salary cap follows. The league's current CBA runs through 2027, with opt-out windows opening in 2026. Tsai bought the Liberty in 2019 for a reported $10 million to $15 million range, depending on which Delaware filing you trust. That makes this a 100x return in five years, driven entirely by league structure repricing and one championship run that sold out Barclays for six straight home dates.
The valuation also explains why three family offices circled the Atlanta Dream before its $78 million sale in 2021 and why Larry Gottesdiener's real estate group paid an undisclosed sum for the Dream—then flipped the narrative by bringing in Renee Montgomery as a playing co-owner. The Liberty model suggests an NBA-adjacent WNBA team with arena control and integrated sponsorship can command a 15x to 20x revenue multiple, far above standalone clubs sharing a college gym or MLS stadium. Angel City FC, the best-capitalized NWSL club, was valued at $180 million in its last funding round, eight times lower than Liberty despite comparable celebrity ownership and a similar top-market thesis.
What to watch: Caitlin Clark's Indiana Fever now has a data point for what a restructured ownership group might pay if Simon Property Group ever considers a sale. Separately, the WNBA is negotiating its next national media package for 2026 launch—the Liberty's number implies the league needs to extract at least $200 million annually to justify current franchise prices, up from roughly $60 million today. That gap will close or the Liberty multiple will compress. Tsai is not selling, but every league call on expansion economics now runs through this Forbes figure.
The Liberty's $1.5 billion is the comp every team president will slide across the table when a PE firm asks about entry price.