The Seattle Seahawks have attracted preliminary interest from multiple billionaire buyers, including technology and private equity figures, as the franchise's current ownership structure explores a sale process. The team, controlled by the trust of late owner Paul Allen since 2018, is valued at approximately $7.2 billion according to Forbes, making it the ninth-most-valuable franchise in the NFL.
No formal sale mandate has been issued, but league sources confirm that representatives for at least three billionaire families have made informal inquiries through back channels. The buyer pool includes Seattle-area tech fortunes, East Coast private equity principals, and at least one foreign investor exploring their first U.S. sports entry. Names have not been disclosed, but the common thread is straightforward: NFL ownership is a scarce asset in a growing league, and Seattle offers both a premium market and a franchise that went to consecutive Super Bowls within the past decade.
The timing is not coincidental. The Allen estate, managed by his sister Jody Allen, has spent five years navigating internal disagreements about the future of both the Seahawks and the NHL's Seattle Kraken. According to reporting by The Athletic, the Kraken ownership group is also exploring a sale after years of internal tension and escalating valuation expectations. The parallel processes suggest a broader housecleaning of Allen family sports holdings, with the NFL asset moving faster due to league-imposed restrictions on passive trusts holding teams indefinitely. NFL rules require estates to transfer ownership within a reasonable timeframe, and Commissioner Roger Goodell has privately encouraged resolution.
For prospective buyers, the Seahawks represent a rare opening. The last NFL franchise to sell was the Denver Broncos in 2022, which fetched $4.65 billion from Walmart heir Rob Walton's group. Since then, franchise valuations have climbed 15-20% across the league, driven by new media deals, legalized gambling partnerships, and expanded international exposure. Seattle's market demographics—high income, corporate sponsorship depth, and a rabid fanbase—place it in the top tier of NFL cities. The franchise also owns Lumen Field in partnership with the public stadium authority, creating additional revenue control.
The tech angle matters. Seattle's proximity to Microsoft, Amazon, and private wealth from exits in cloud infrastructure and gaming creates a natural buyer pool. But it also raises questions about conflicts of interest. NFL ownership rules prohibit active team control by individuals with gambling, cannabis, or competing sports investments. Several Seattle-area tech billionaires have venture stakes in betting platforms, which would require divestment. The league's finance committee will scrutinize any bid closely, as it did with Walton's Broncos purchase, which required months of vetting despite his clean balance sheet.
Private equity's interest is newer. The NFL recently voted to allow institutional funds to take passive stakes of up to 10% in franchises, opening the door for firms like Arctos Partners and Ares Management to participate. However, the Seahawks deal is expected to seek a controlling buyer, not a minority carve-out. That limits PE involvement to co-investment alongside a lead billionaire, similar to the structure used in MLS and European soccer. The model is untested at NFL scale, but it allows buyers to reduce check size while maintaining league-required control.
The sale process, if it advances, will unfold slowly. The Allen trust has not hired an investment bank, and no timeline has been communicated to the league office. But informal interest is a leading indicator. In sports M&A, the serious buyers surface months before auction, testing price sensitivity and ownership fit. The fact that multiple billionaires are already circling suggests the trust is open to conversations, even if no press release is imminent.
What to watch: whether Jody Allen hires Allen & Company or Raine Group to run a formal process, which would signal intent to sell in the next 12-18 months. Also, who surfaces from the Seattle tech community—names like Steve Ballmer (who owns the Clippers but could shift) or lesser-known cloud-era billionaires with quieter fortunes. Finally, whether the Kraken and Seahawks are packaged together, which would push the total deal value above $8 billion and narrow the buyer pool to sovereign wealth and family offices.
The NFL has seven months until its next ownership meeting in May. That's when any serious bid would need league approval votes. The clock is running.