Francis Ngannou, who walked away from the UFC in January 2023 after the promotion declined to match his demand for boxing cross-promotional rights and sponsor freedom, now publicly questions why fighters continue signing long-term exclusive deals. In recent interviews, Ngannou stated that most UFC athletes accept contract terms that bar them from competing in boxing, wrestling, or other combat ventures during and after their UFC tenure—restrictions he calls "unnecessarily restrictive." He points to his own post-UFC earnings: a reported $10 million guarantee for his October 2023 Tyson Fury boxing match, plus ancillary sponsor deals he estimates at $2 million annually. By contrast, active UFC champions earn disclosed fight purses ranging from $500,000 to $3 million per bout, with the promotion retaining most media rights and sponsor revenue.
The structural complaint is familiar. UFC contracts typically span 8 fights or 3-4 years and include matching clauses that let the promotion extend terms if a fighter receives an outside offer. Fighters cannot compete in boxing, grappling, or mixed-martial-arts promotions without explicit UFC approval, and post-career non-compete windows can stretch 6 months. Ngannou argues this framework suppresses income during peak earning years, particularly for heavyweights whose windows are narrow. He also notes that fighters forfeit name-and-likeness revenue: the UFC owns video game rights, trading card appearances, and highlight reels in perpetuity under current deals. Independent fighters can negotiate those streams separately. Ngannou himself secured a licensing deal with Riyadh Season worth a reported $500,000 for promotional appearances, separate from fight purses—revenue unavailable to roster athletes.
The economics support his critique, though the risk profile is steep. Ngannou has fought twice since leaving: Tyson Fury in October 2023 (loss, but competitive) and Anthony Joshua in March 2024 (knockout loss, second round). He earned approximately $20 million combined but has not competed since. UFC fighters on active contracts fight 2-3 times per year with guaranteed base pay, health coverage during camp, and performance bonuses. Ngannou now funds his own training camps (estimated $150,000 per fight), negotiates purses fight-by-fight, and self-insures. For most fighters ranked outside the top five, the independent model is financially unviable. But for champions and main-event draws, the gap is real. Conor McGregor, who negotiated boxing rights into his UFC deal in 2017, earned a disclosed $100 million guarantee for the Floyd Mayweather fight—revenue the UFC shared but did not block. No fighter since has secured comparable terms.
Ngannou's public stance matters because he remains the rare fighter with leverage to criticize openly. Most athletes avoid public contract disputes while active, fearing matchmaking retaliation or release. Ngannou, financially secure and fighting independently, can afford candor. His comments arrive as the UFC negotiates a new media rights deal, expected to close in late 2025 with a projected value above $1 billion annually. Fighter revenue share remains fixed at roughly 16-20% of total promotion revenue, well below the 48-50% splits common in boxing, NBA, and NFL structures. Several managers and agents have quietly begun exploring co-promotion models, where fighters retain partial commercial rights while still competing under UFC matchmaking. The promotion has shown no interest.
What to watch: Ngannou is expected to return to competition in Q4 2025, likely in a PFL-promoted bout now that the organization holds his MMA rights under a hybrid deal. His disclosed purse will signal whether independent heavyweight earnings remain viable after two boxing losses. Separately, watch for fighters who test restricted free agency when the UFC's exclusive negotiating window expires—Jon Jones and Israel Adesanya both have contracts up for renewal in 2026. If either secures boxing cross-promotional rights, it shifts the model. If not, Ngannou's path remains an outlier.
The UFC has not responded to Ngannou's recent comments. Fighters under contract have not commented publicly. The promotion's fighter payment disclosure, required under new federal guidelines, is due in Q1 2026.
The takeaway
Ngannou's **$20M** boxing run supports his critique, but the independent model remains rare—only fighters with existing leverage can afford the risk.
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