The Golden State Valkyries are worth $1 billion, according to CNBC's 2026 franchise valuations released Tuesday, making them the first WNBA team to reach ten figures. League average valuations now sit at $460 million, up from $150 million in 2023, the year before the new media-rights package took effect.
The Valkyries began play in 2025 as an expansion franchise, with Joe Lacob and Peter Guber's ownership group paying $50 million for the slot—a figure that now looks quaint. The valuation reflects Chase Center access, cross-marketing leverage with the Warriors, and early sponsor commitments from Rakuten, Kaiser Permanente, and JPMorgan Chase that bundled WNBA inventory into existing Golden State packages. The team posted $42 million in revenue in its inaugural season, per league filings, the highest debut figure in WNBA history.
The jump matters because it resets the price floor for future expansion slots. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert has said the league is targeting 16 teams by 2028, with Toronto, Nashville, and Austin circling. The last expansion fee—$50 million for the Valkyries in 2023—already feels light. Portland's ownership group, which secured a franchise announcement for 2027, is believed to have paid closer to $80 million, though the league has not confirmed. A $1 billion comp suggests the next round of slots could command $100 million or more, especially in markets with NBA cross-ownership or existing arena deals.
Sponsor allocators are recalibrating. The WNBA's new media deal—$2.2 billion over 11 years starting in 2025—brought national inventory to Amazon Prime, ESPN, and NBC. Valkyries jersey patches, previously bundled as Warriors add-ons, are now being priced standalone. Rakuten's patch deal, signed in 2024 for an undisclosed sum, is up for renewal in 2027. Comparable NBA patches run $15 million to $20 million annually; Valkyries terms are thought to be in the $3 million to $5 million range now, but that gap is narrowing faster than expected.
The valuation also signals where family offices are looking. The Valkyries' cap table includes Condoleezza Rice, Billie Jean King, and Cypress Semiconductor founder T.J. Rodgers. None have disclosed stakes, but the $1 billion figure implies meaningful paper returns for early backers. Meanwhile, private equity remains locked out—league rules still prohibit institutional fund ownership—but secondary-market whispers suggest minority stakes in several franchises have changed hands quietly over the past 12 months, with buyers paying premiums to the last disclosed valuations.
What to watch: Toronto's expansion announcement is expected by March, with Nashville likely to follow in the summer. The Valkyries' first jersey-patch renewal negotiation begins in earnest after the 2026 season. And Lacob, who also owns the Warriors, will face questions about whether the WNBA's new economics justify building a second arena or further sharing Chase Center dates, especially if playoff runs overlap.
The $1 billion mark is a headline, but the $460 million league average is the number that moves capital. It suggests the WNBA is no longer a philanthropic line item on an NBA owner's balance sheet. It's a measurable return, and the phones are ringing.
The takeaway
Valkyries hit **$1 billion**, resetting WNBA expansion-slot pricing and signaling the league's transition from subsidy play to standalone asset class.
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