The Golden State Valkyries are worth $1 billion, according to CNBC's 2026 franchise valuations released Thursday. The expansion club launched in May 2025. It took seven months of actual basketball.
The franchise is backed by Joe Lacob and Peter Guber, who also own the NBA's Warriors, and plays in Chase Center. CNBC's methodology weighs revenue (sponsorship, ticket, merchandise, media), equity stake transactions, and comparable sale multiples. The Valkyries' valuation reflects $75 million in estimated annual revenue, per the report, driven by sold-out home gates averaging 18,064 fans and a regional media deal with NBC Sports Bay Area that pays low eight figures. The team went 19-21 in its first season, missed the playoffs, and still moved more branded merchandise than any WNBA club except the Las Vegas Aces.
This matters because the WNBA has three expansion franchises in process—Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia—all approved by league and NBA boards of governors in recent months and scheduled to begin play by 2030. Each paid entry fees between $85 million and $115 million when those deals were structured in late 2024 and early 2025. The Valkyries' ascent to ten figures resets the floor for what ownership groups will demand in secondary sales or what new entrants might pay if the league opens a fourth expansion slot. The Connecticut Sun, relocating to Houston after the 2026 season in a sale unanimously approved this week, changes hands at an undisclosed price; league sources expect that number to land north of $150 million, well above the Sun's CNBC valuation of $87 million before the move was public.
The Valkyries' performance also clarifies sponsor math. The team's founding partnership tier included $8 million annually from Salesforce, $6 million from JPMorgan Chase, and $4.5 million from Kaiser Permanente, per filings reviewed by Bloomberg. Those deals run through 2028. Comparable NBA sponsor rates in the same building—Chase Center—run 3.2x higher for similar activation, meaning the gap is compressing faster than projections modeled 18 months ago when the franchise was awarded. Corporate allocators now treat women's basketball as a distinct media buy, not a diversity footnote inside a men's sports budget. The shift shows in Valkyries jersey patch revenue: $12 million over three years from Acorns, a fintech with 6 million users, none of whom watch the Warriors.
The broader valuation list confirms the pull of new builds and relocations. Las Vegas sits at $215 million, New York at $198 million, Los Angeles at $185 million. The Sun, before the Houston move, ranked ninth at $87 million despite a 27-13 record and a conference finals appearance. Geography and facility control matter more than winning when buyers model cash flow. The Houston franchise will play in Toyota Center, controlled by Tilman Fertitta, who is buying the team; the building hosts 7 million visitors annually across NBA games, concerts, and conventions, and the WNBA club inherits that sponsor architecture immediately.
Expansion group leads in Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia are now fielding calls from secondary bidders exploring entry routes in Charlotte, Austin, and Nashville. League sources say Commissioner Cathy Engelbert will not open formal discussions on a 16th team until the three committed franchises are operational, likely 2029 at the earliest. The math, however, is already moving. If a year-one club in San Francisco commands $1 billion, a hypothetical Nashville franchise with Bridgestone Arena control and a credible ownership group starts at $200 million before a single ticket is printed.
Watch for the Connecticut-to-Houston sale price to surface in SEC filings if Fertitta's ownership structure includes any publicly traded debt; that number becomes the comp for Detroit and Philadelphia, both of which have signed arena leases but have not yet closed on final equity stakes. Also watch Valkyries season-ticket renewal rates, due in April; if they hold above 80%, that solidifies the revenue model CNBC used and likely pushes sponsor rates higher for year two. The Acorns patch deal expires in 2028, and three Fortune 500 finance brands have already requested pitch windows, per a person familiar with the team's sales process.
The Golden State model—Chase Center infrastructure, Lacob family capital, immediate brand spend—cannot be replicated in most markets. But it establishes a ceiling that pulls every other franchise upward, and it gives the league a reference asset when private equity groups start asking what a WNBA stake portfolio might actually yield. The answer, as of Thursday, includes a ten-figure comp achieved in a single regular season.
The takeaway
Golden State's $1 billion valuation in year one resets expansion math; Detroit and Philadelphia deals now priced off a nine-figure baseline.
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