• Loading stock data...
Monday, March 23, 2026

WNBA’s Media-Rights Deal Could Surge to $3 Billion with New Partners

  • The WNBA’s deal with ESPN, NBC, and Amazon is worth $2.2 billion over 11 years.
  • CBS and Scripps are current league partners that could renew deals with the WNBA.
Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

The WNBA’s historic media-rights deal may end up much larger than previously announced if the league is able to add additional partners.

The signed deal between the NBA and Disney, NBCUniversal, and Amazon is worth $77 billion for 11 years, with $2.2 billion of the deal, or about $200 million per year, assigned to the WNBA. But the WNBA could end up with as much as $3 billion in rights fees by the end of the 11-year term, according to ESPN

A source confirmed to Front Office Sports that the league is expecting to extract more than $260 million per year from its broadcasting fees—greater than four times its previous deal—due to additional partners. CBS and Scripps Sports are the likely newcomers, as both currently have deals with the WNBA. Both companies signed deals with the league that expire in 2025, just as the WNBA’s next deal kicks in. 

“Scripps Sports is proud of our involvement, investment, and commitment to the WNBA and its growth,” the company’s president, Brian Lawlor, tells Front Office Sports. “We believe we are an important part of the visibility of the league and hope to be able to continue serving WNBA audiences with appointment TV on Friday nights on Ion for many years to come.” CBS Sports did not respond to a request for comment when asked by FOS.

The addition of more partners would follow the WNBA’s previous deal, which began as a partnership with ESPN valued at around $40 million per year, then added Amazon, CBS, and Scripps over the last few years to bring its yearly media-rights revenue to $60 million. 

The $260 million annual price tag is more than double the valuation Endeavor’s media consulting group gave to the WNBA. While this speaks to the league’s unprecedented growth since the arrival of rookies Caitlin Clark (above, right) and Angel Reese, the WNBA also has the opportunity to sell more games to its rights holders.

The league is expanding to 13 teams next season, and then to 14 by 2026. It’s also expecting to see its regular-season schedule grow from 40 games to 44. More teams and games means more content to sell to broadcast partners, particularly those hoping to jump on the WNBA’s rise in popularity.

Going Solo

The WNBA’s rise has brought up the question of whether it can fully detach itself from the NBA.

While the WNBA is growing, it can’t decide its independence on a whim. The NBA has invested—and lost—significantly on the WNBA over the last few years, so it wouldn’t make much sense to let go of the WNBA as it begins its ascent. Moreover, five of the 12 WNBA teams are owned by their NBA counterparts.

There are still benefits to the WNBA partnering with the NBA. The media-rights deal is proof of that, as there’s no assurance that it would have received a deal this large if not for its attachment to the NBA.

“I don’t like how we’re somehow confusing the WNBA’s increase as though it’s merit-based versus being on the tail of the NBA,” former MLB executive David Samson said on Pablo Torre Finds Out.

Though former ESPN president John Skipper, who helped negotiate the network’s past NBA and WNBA media deals, said on the same show that the WNBA sees the benefit of staying tied to the NBA.

“Certainly [the WNBA] could do it on their own,” Skipper said. “They, together with the NBA, decided that they had the likelihood of getting more money this way, and they did.” 

WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert has suggested staying tied to the NBA is the league’s best option for now.

“There’s no other set of two sports leagues that can offer that live programming and sports to a streamer like that,” Engelbert said in April. “I would say probably in that case we need the NBA because we have a smaller footprint with only 40 games, and it’s nice to go to market together.”

But whether that’s the best option for the WNBA moving forward is a contentious question. In October, Larry Gottesdiener, managing partner of the Atlanta Dream, one of the franchises not owned by an NBA governor, told FOS that while he thinks WNBA teams having shared NBA owners was “necessary” in the beginning, it may not be what’s best for the league anymore.

“But now, for the long-term health and viability of the players and the league … there needs to be more independent, dedicated ownership,” Gottesdiener said.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Why Teams Aren’t Posting Their Own March Madness Highlights

The NCAA’s strict game highlights policy limits what teams themselves can post.

NCAA Sues DraftKings Over March Madness Trademark Infringement

NCAA president Charlie Baker has also gone after prediction markets.

WNBA, WNBPA Sign Term Sheet for 7-Year CBA

Next, the players and board of governors will vote to ratify.
Mar 17, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) reacts after a score next to center Jalen Duren (0) during the first half against the New Orleans Pelicans at Smoothie King Center.

How Cade Cunningham’s Injury Could Cost Pistons Nearly $50M

He’s four games shy of hitting the 65-game threshold for NBA awards.

Featured Today

Beau Brune/LSU

College Athletic Departments Are Becoming Media Companies

“There’s only so many tickets you can sell, but content is infinite.”
March 18, 2026

AI College Recruiting Reels Aren’t Fooling Scouts

College coaches and recruiters are way ahead of cheating athletes.
March 7, 2026

Alex Eala Has Become One of the Biggest Draws in Tennis

Eala will face Coco Gauff in the third round at Indian Wells.
Jun 9, 2021; Paris, France; The racket of Coco Gauff (USA) after she smashed it during her match against Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) on day 11 of the French Open at Stade Roland Garros
March 6, 2026

The ‘Rage Room’ Is the Hottest Place in Tennis

The idea came from a player podcast.
Ben Strauss

Ben Strauss Discusses WaPo Layoff, His New Role at ESPN

The longtime media reporter was laid off while covering the Super Bowl.
Sports commentator watches games on NFL Red Zone
March 19, 2026

NFL Sunday Ticket Exit from DirecTV Forces U.S. Bars to Adapt

DirecTV will no longer distribute the out-of-market package.
March 19, 2026

WBC Title Game Draws Record 10.8M U.S. Viewers

The tournament ends its breakthrough run in emphatic fashion.
Sponsored

Paul Rabil: Why Owning a Team Is a 100x Bet

Paul Rabil shares how he left an established league to build PLL.
Feb 13, 2026; Inglewood, California, USA; NBC Peacock play-by-play announcer Noah Eagle during an NBA All Star Rising Stars game at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
exclusive
March 19, 2026

Noah Eagle, Michael Grady, Zora Stephenson to Call WNBA on NBC

WNBA games are returning to NBC for the first time since 2002.
March 19, 2026

March Madness Fuels the Push Toward More Screens, More Games

This year, there are even more multiview options available.
Oct 28, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers former player Orel Hershiser reacts after throwing the ceremonial first pitch before game four of the 2025 MLB World Series between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
exclusive
March 19, 2026

Hershiser, Gonzalez Join NBC MLB Opening Day Coverage

The World Series legends will join Jason Benetti in the broadcast booth.
Fox News Logo
exclusive
March 18, 2026

Fox Corp. and Kalshi in Advanced Talks on Deal

The deal would include Fox News, but not Fox Sports.