Alex Pereira is the only UFC fighter collecting $10 million at Freedom 250, according to Daniel Cormier, who disclosed the figure during broadcast commentary. The payout follows a contract extension Pereira signed in March, positioning him as the promotion's highest-paid active competitor by disclosed earnings. No other fighter on the card breaks eight figures.
Pereira, 34, holds the light-heavyweight title and has generated 1.2 million pay-per-view buys across his last three headliners, per industry estimates. The March contract arrived after Pereira publicly floated a move to heavyweight to challenge Jon Jones, a bout that would anchor the promotion's highest-revenue event since Conor McGregor's last appearance. Pereira's camp has confirmed the Jones fight remains on the table, though no date is set. The $10 million Freedom 250 purse establishes his floor ahead of any superfight negotiation.
The disclosure lands as UFC parent TKO Group Holdings navigates a $21 billion valuation and increased investor scrutiny of fighter compensation ratios. The promotion settled a $335 million antitrust lawsuit in March tied to allegations it suppressed pay; fighters historically receive 16-18% of revenue, compared to 50% in boxing's major bouts. Pereira's deal suggests TKO is willing to approach boxing economics for marquee names while maintaining tighter control across the roster. The same week Cormier revealed Pereira's payout, the UFC cut 18-1 bantamweight Daniel Marcos as part of Dana White's latest roster purge, removing four fighters despite Marcos holding a 5-1 promotional record.
White testified in a separate court case this month that he does not handle fighter contracts or matchmaking, a curious claim given his 25-year tenure and public role in announcing signings. The testimony appears designed to insulate him from liability in ongoing litigation, but it complicates the narrative around Pereira's deal. Someone negotiated the $10 million guarantee, and someone decided Marcos—who lost once in seven UFC appearances—was expendable. The economics suggest a barbell strategy: concentrate payroll on proven PPV drivers, compress spending everywhere else.
Pereira's positioning matters for sponsor alignment and broadcast negotiations. His last three fights aired on ESPN+ PPV at $79.99 per household, and his knockout rate (92% of wins inside the distance) plays cleanly in highlight packages. If the Jones fight materializes, TKO can point to Pereira's $10 million baseline to justify a $25-30 million co-main or superfight purse, levels that unlock tier-one sponsorships beyond crypto and energy drinks. The March contract timing also syncs with TKO's fiscal calendar; any Jones bout would likely land in Q4 2026 or Q1 2027, booking the revenue ahead of earnings calls.
Watch whether Pereira headlines again before the Jones fight or sits until that bout is finalized. His next opponent and purse will clarify whether $10 million is his new floor or a one-time Freedom 250 premium. Also watch roster cuts; if TKO continues trimming mid-tier talent, the promotion is reallocating budget upward, not expanding total fighter spend. Jon Jones has not fought since November 2023, and his return date remains unannounced.