SourceESPN ↗
SubjectNew York Liberty (WNBA)
CategoryWomen's Sports
SignalValuation published
TierLOUIS XIII

The New York Liberty carries a $1.5 billion valuation in Forbes' latest assessment, making it the most valuable women's professional sports franchise in North America and the first to crack ten figures by a wide margin.

The figure places the reigning WNBA champion roughly 50% higher than the $1 billion expansion fee the NBA collected for its most recent franchise additions and triple the $450 million the Phoenix Mercury changed hands for in 2023, the previous high-water mark in women's team transactions. Joe Tsai's purchase of the Liberty in 2019 as part of his $3.3 billion acquisition of the Brooklyn Nets and Barclays Center carried an implied Liberty value around $75 million at the time, though no standalone price was disclosed. That suggests a 20x appreciation in five years, though the 2019 number is reconstructed from league averages.

The valuation reflects structural changes beyond on-court success. The Liberty sold out all 40 home games in 2024, playing to a Barclays Center capacity reconfigured to 17,732 for basketball, and drew an average 15,200 paid attendees, a league record. Sponsorship inventory turned over completely between 2022 and 2024, with jersey patches, court naming, and practice facility deals repricing at multiples of previous terms. The team declined to confirm reported numbers, but two sponsors with knowledge of rate cards said CPM-equivalent pricing for in-venue signage rose 300-400% in that window. Charter's sideline boards, visible in every broadcast wide shot, reportedly carried a mid-six-figure annual commitment, up from low six figures two seasons prior.

Broadcast tailwinds amplified local momentum. The Liberty's Game 5 Finals appearance in October drew 3.3 million viewers on ESPN, the most-watched WNBA game since 1999, and the league's new media rights deal beginning in 2026 will deliver $200 million annually across Disney, NBCUniversal, and Amazon, a 300% increase over the expiring contract. Revenue-sharing formulas remain opaque, but WNBA teams are expected to see per-club distributions rise from roughly $1.5 million to north of $6 million once the new deals activate. The Liberty's New York market position and playoff inventory should index above league average.

Still, the $1.5 billion figure prices the franchise at 12-15x estimated revenue, assuming the team generated $100-125 million in 2024 across ticketing, local media, sponsorship, and league distributions. That multiple exceeds most NBA teams outside top-five markets and implies either significant near-term revenue acceleration or buyers willing to pay for scarcity and narrative. There are 12 WNBA franchises; the NBA added its 30th team in 2004 and has frozen expansion since. The Liberty plays in the largest U.S. media market, shares an arena with an NBA flagship, and benefits from Tsai's operational overlap, including shared analytics staff and a front-office structure that mirrors Brooklyn's.

Valuation comps remain thin. Angel City FC, the NWSL expansion side, last raised at a $250 million post-money valuation in 2022, though soccer's global talent pool and closer parity with men's leagues makes direct comparison difficult. European women's soccer clubs are typically subsidiaries of men's operations and don't trade separately. The closest analog may be collegiate programs: South Carolina women's basketball generated over $20 million in revenue in 2023-24, more than most WNBA teams, but those assets can't be bought.

Tsai's broader portfolio absorbs the Liberty's operating losses—WNBA teams league-wide remain unprofitable on a standalone basis—but the valuation establishes a benchmark for league expansion talks. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert has stated the WNBA will add teams in 2025 and beyond; Golden State and Toronto groups have signaled interest. If expansion fees track anywhere near Forbes' Liberty number, even at a 30-40% discount for less-established markets, the league could collect $900 million to $1 billion per slot, fundamentally altering capital available for player salaries, which currently max out at $250,000 under the CBA.

Tsai hasn't commented on the valuation. His family office declined interview requests.

The Liberty opens 2025 training camp in April. Contract extensions for Breanna Stewart and Jonquel Jones, both eligible for renegotiation after their championship season, will test how much of the franchise's paper appreciation flows to roster spend. The current salary cap sits at $1.46 million per team. That number, not the $1.5 billion headline, determines what happens on the floor.

wnbavaluationswomens-sportsnew-york-libertyexpansionjoe-tsai
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