Major League Soccer awarded its thirtieth franchise to a San Diego ownership group at a $600 million entry fee, targeting kickoff in the 2026 season. The group includes local real estate investors and undisclosed institutional capital. The league confirmed the decision after a two-year venue negotiation that settled on a temporary stadium solution while a permanent facility remains in planning.
The franchise joins a 2026-27 expansion wave that includes teams in Atlanta and potentially one additional market. San Diego becomes the fourth MLS club in California alongside LA Galaxy, LAFC, and San Jose Earthquakes. The league has not announced stadium specifics beyond preliminary talks with San Diego State University regarding a shared-use arrangement at Snapdragon Stadium, the 35,000-seat venue that opened in 2022. Permanent stadium financing remains unresolved.
The $600 million valuation represents a 20% increase from the $500 million Charlotte FC paid in 2019 and arrives eighteen months before the U.S. co-hosts the 2026 World Cup. MLS franchise values have appreciated steadily since Atlanta United's 2017 debut at $70 million and subsequent resale comps in the $300 million to $400 million range. San Diego's entry price reflects league confidence in a market with 3.3 million metro residents and no NFL tenant since the Chargers relocated in 2017. The city ranks as the eighth-largest U.S. metro without an MLS club.
The move tightens West Coast scheduling logistics for the league's existing California and Pacific Northwest teams, reducing cross-country travel that inflates operating costs and compresses recovery windows. It also accelerates premium inventory before the World Cup pricing window closes. Charlotte's $500 million fee in 2019 included a stadium commitment; San Diego's comparable price without finalized venue terms suggests the league is pricing in California media value and sponsorship density rather than infrastructure certainty.
San Diego's ownership has not disclosed names or capital structure, but the league's recent expansion approvals have favored groups with institutional backing and naming-rights pipelines already in motion. Nashville SC's $150 million fee in 2017 included anchor sponsors; Charlotte's group had Bank of America pre-wired. The undisclosed San Diego capital likely follows that template. Meanwhile, the franchise adds a fourth California club to a state that already produces uneven attendance figures—San Jose averaged 14,903 fans per match in 2023 versus LA Galaxy's 22,126—raising questions about market saturation in a league still chasing consistent local broadcast revenue.
The timeline leaves the ownership group roughly 18 months to finalize stadium terms, hire front-office executives, and begin player acquisition before a provisional 2026 start. Charlotte took 36 months from approval to kickoff; Austin FC took 24 months. San Diego's compressed window suggests the temporary Snapdragon arrangement is further along than public statements indicate, or the league has relaxed infrastructure standards to hit the World Cup window.
San Antonio, which pursued MLS expansion for nearly a decade, did not receive a franchise. Mayor Ron Nirenberg is now seeking financial recourse from the Spurs organization, which controlled San Antonio's expansion bid and declined to proceed after the league shifted fee structures. The bid collapsed in 2018 when MLS raised entry prices from $150 million to $200 million; Spurs ownership declined to match.
The San Diego group will begin executive searches in the next quarter. General manager and head coach hires typically surface four to six months post-approval, followed by kit sponsorship and naming-rights announcements. The 2026 World Cup final is scheduled for July 19 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. San Diego's inaugural season would begin in late February or early March 2026, five months before the tournament opens.