The Golden State Valkyries, the WNBA's newest franchise, are valued at $1 billion in a 2026 league-wide assessment, making it the first women's professional basketball team to reach ten-figure territory. The team, owned by Warriors principal Joe Lacob and operating out of Chase Center, has not yet played a regular-season game.
The valuation arrives eighteen months after Lacob paid a reported $50 million expansion fee to join the league. That number now looks quaint. The league's next expansion window—Portland and Toronto are circling—will use the Valkyries figure as a floor, not a ceiling. Sportico's latest report pegs the Las Vegas Aces, the league's reigning dynasty, at $890 million, and the New York Liberty at $850 million. The rest of the twelve-team league sits between $250 million and $650 million. The gap between first and twelfth is meaningful: it reflects venue control, market density, and willingness to spend on infrastructure before the league's media rights reset.
The Valkyries benefit from shared infrastructure with the Warriors, including Chase Center's premium inventory, corporate partnerships already scaled for an NBA operation, and a front office that knows how to extract margin from a California tax base. Lacob's playbook—hire a head coach with pedigree (Natalie Nakase, former Clippers assistant), sign a marquee free agent (he will), and sell courtside to the same venture allocation partners who sit Warriors baseline—is not novel, but it is executable. The franchise also inherits the Warriors' broadcast distribution and sponsorship stack, which includes Rakuten, JP Morgan, and Google Cloud. Those deals do not automatically extend to the WNBA property, but the path is shorter than if the Valkyries were standalone.
What matters for the rest of the league is the comp reset. The WNBA's next media rights deal, expected to close in the next eighteen months, will use this valuation as exhibit A in negotiations. The league's current eleven-year, $200 million deal with ESPN expires after the 2025 season. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert has said publicly she expects the next package to approach $500 million annually. The Valkyries number makes that ask easier to defend. Investors pricing minority stakes in other franchises—Atlanta, Chicago, Phoenix—now have a benchmark that did not exist six months ago. Family offices that passed on WNBA exposure at $30 million per team in 2020 are recalculating.
The valuation also clarifies what the league is and is not. It is not a charity project. It is not a loss leader for NBA teams. It is a North American women's sports property with durable TV ratings, demo skew toward high-income women and Gen Z, and franchise values that compound faster than MLS did in its second decade. The Valkyries hit $1 billion because Lacob paid market, built market, and the market agreed. The next buyer will pay $75 million for an expansion slot, not $50 million.
The Valkyries open play in May 2026. Their first opponent and draft position will be determined in the next sixty days. Nakase is expected to name her full coaching staff by March. The team's first kit sponsor and jersey patch deals—likely separate, likely seven figures each—will close before opening night. Chase Center's luxury suite holders have already received Valkyries sales decks. The conversion rate will determine whether this valuation was generous or conservative.
The takeaway
WNBA's first billion-dollar franchise resets expansion pricing and arms Cathy Engelbert's media rights pitch with a defensible comp.
wnbafranchise valuationwomen's sportsgolden state valkyriesjoe lacobexpansion
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