A billionaire investor holding a minority stake in the San Francisco 49ers has entered discussions to acquire the Seattle Seahawks, according to three people briefed on the process. The approach follows Mark Zuckerberg's decision to withdraw from the bidding pool last month, narrowing the field as trustee Jody Allen pursues a valuation north of $6 billion.
The investor's name has not been disclosed, but league sources confirm active 49ers ownership ties, creating an immediate structural complication. NFL bylaws prohibit cross-ownership within the same division absent a divestiture plan approved by 24 of 32 owners. The interested party would need to exit the 49ers entirely before closing a Seahawks transaction, a process that typically requires 90 to 120 days from signed letter of intent to ownership committee clearance. One person familiar with the matter said preliminary legal work on the divestiture framework began in February, suggesting the bid predates Zuckerberg's formal withdrawal.
The Seahawks sale has moved slower than anticipated after Paul Allen's 2018 death left the franchise in trust under his sister's control. Initial expectations called for a deal by late 2024, but the process remains in second-round diligence as of mid-March 2025. Allen has rejected at least two informal offers in the $5.2B to $5.6B range, according to a banker who has reviewed term sheets. The trust's reluctance reflects comparable sales data: the Washington Commanders fetched $6.05B in 2023, and the Broncos sold for $4.65B in 2022 before the Commanders reset the market. Seattle's stronger media market and newer stadium infrastructure support the higher ask.
Zuckerberg's exit removed the highest-profile name from contention but not the deepest capital base. Two family offices tied to private equity principals remain engaged, alongside the 49ers-linked bidder. A fourth group, backed by Seattle-area tech wealth, submitted materials in January but has since gone quiet. The family offices carry advantages in speed—no cross-ownership entanglements, established NFL relationships through prior stadium naming deals and club-seat partnerships—but lack the insider credibility that comes with existing franchise ties. The 49ers investor brings knowledge of NFC West divisional economics, existing relationships with broadcast partners, and a working understanding of league revenue-sharing mechanisms that newer bidders must learn in diligence.
The cross-division angle introduces risk beyond the divestiture calendar. If the 49ers minority stake represents more than 5 percent equity—the threshold requiring formal league disclosure—the sale to a third party could trigger tag-along rights for other 49ers limited partners, complicating the exit. One attorney who structures sports transactions noted that "cleanly exiting a sub-10 percent position in a top-five NFL franchise can take four months if everyone cooperates, or eight if someone decides to enforce rights nobody remembered existed." The Seahawks bidder would also face scrutiny over whether the 49ers investment delivered proprietary competitive insights, though league precedent suggests the concern is procedural rather than disqualifying.
Sponsorship executives monitoring the sale have begun positioning for a ownership transition that could arrive in Q3 or Q4. Alaska Airlines holds naming rights to the Seahawks' stadium through 2033 at a reported $4.3M annually, a below-market rate locked in during 2018 negotiations. A new owner would likely revisit that deal, especially given Lumen Field's upcoming $200M renovation starting in 2026. One sponsor-side executive said his team has "modeled three scenarios: Alaska extends early at higher rate, new tech brand buys them out, or nothing happens until 2033—and we're betting on the buyout." The executive declined to name the modeled acquirer.
The next milestone is Allen's decision on whether to grant exclusivity to a single bidder, a step that would accelerate diligence but surrender negotiating leverage. Two people close to the process expect that call by late April. The 49ers-linked investor has not yet requested exclusivity, preferring to resolve the cross-ownership structure before committing to a binding timeline. If exclusivity is granted, the league's finance committee would receive preliminary materials in May, setting up a formal ownership vote in late summer.
The other active bidders are watching the divestiture chess match closely. One family-office principal told an advisor that "if he's serious, he's already selling the 49ers piece—and if he's not selling yet, he's not serious." The comment reflects a broader impatience among buyers who have now spent 14 months circling a franchise that remains, for now, not quite for sale.
The takeaway
49ers minority owner bidding **$6B+** for Seahawks must exit current stake first, extending sale timeline into Q3 as Allen holds for Commanders-level comp.
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