The NWSL awarded its fifteenth franchise to an Atlanta ownership group last week at an undisclosed price that league sources place above $100 million, matching the implicit valuation floor established by Boston's 2024 entry. The WNBA's Golden State expansion franchise, announced in October, carried a $50 million fee—double the $25 million Portland paid in 2023. By 2026, both leagues expect new teams to command nine-figure commitments before stadium, roster, or infrastructure spend.
The convergence is structural. NWSL television rights grew 400% in the current cycle, with CBS, ESPN, and Amazon paying a combined $240 million over four years starting in 2023. WNBA rights negotiations, expected to close by mid-2025, are projected to exceed $200 million annually, up from $60 million under the expiring deal. Attendance for both leagues rose 30%+ year-over-year in 2024, and corporate sponsorship revenue per team doubled since 2022. The Atlanta franchise announced sponsorship commitments before naming a coach, a reversal of the typical launch sequence.
What matters: institutional allocators now model women's sports franchises as yield vehicles, not speculative positions. Family offices that entered at $30-40 million in 2021-2022 are marking assets at $120-150 million based on recent transaction comps. The NWSL's shift to single-entity ownership in 2020—eliminating the independent-operator structure—created standardized revenue sharing and league-level sponsorship that mirrors MLS economics. The WNBA, already single-entity since 1997, benefits from NBA infrastructure but carries lower margin clarity; teams still lose money on a per-game basis despite rising attendance. The bet is on 2026 media rights erasing operating losses and converting franchises to cash-flow positive within 24 months.
Sponsors are adjusting accordingly. Nike extended its WNBA apparel deal through 2037 in a contract believed to exceed $60 million annually, and Visa moved NWSL to its global sports portfolio tier in 2024, pricing comparable to second-division men's soccer. Brands that entered at mid-six-figure deals in 2020 are now renewing at $2-5 million annually for league partnerships, and individual teams command seven-figure jersey patches. The economic logic shifted from cause marketing to media efficiency: women's sports deliver younger, higher-income audiences at half the CPM of men's properties.
Three things to watch: WNBA expansion beyond the 15th franchise expected in Miami or Nashville by Q2 2025, with pricing likely at $75-100 million; NWSL's sixteenth team announcement, rumored for Cleveland or Denver, expected by March; and the first secondary-market franchise sale in either league, which will establish public valuation benchmarks. The Atlanta group includes Anheuser-Busch heir Billy Busch and former Falcons executives, a roster that signals institutional validation rather than celebrity vanity.
The NWSL begins its 2026 season with fifteen teams, up from ten in 2021. The WNBA will field thirteen teams by 2026, its largest footprint since 2009. Both leagues are pricing expansion under the assumption that 2026 media deals hold, attendance sustains, and corporate sponsorship continues compounding at 20%+ annually. If any pillar softens, the $100 million threshold becomes a ceiling, not a floor.
The takeaway
Women's sports franchises now price above **$100M** on 2026 media assumptions, with institutional buyers replacing early-stage risk capital.
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