The Golden State Valkyries are valued at $850 million in Sportico's 2026 WNBA franchise rankings, released Thursday, marking the first time any women's professional basketball team has approached ten-figure territory. The franchise began play in May 2025.
The valuation represents a 112% increase from the Valkyries' implied entry price of roughly $400 million, paid by majority owner Joe Lacob's ownership group in late 2023 when the league approved the San Francisco Bay Area expansion. Sportico's methodology weights revenue multiples, arena economics, and comparable transactions. The next-closest franchise, the New York Liberty, sits at $525 million, per the same ranking. The league's median valuation is $285 million, up from $165 million in 2024.
The gap matters for three constituencies. First, the Portland expansion group—awarded a franchise in February 2026 for a reported $125 million fee—now faces a $725 million markup if they want exit liquidity at Golden State's comp. Second, the league's 2027 media rights negotiation begins in September, and commissioner Cathy Engelbert has cited franchise valuations as evidence of sustainable growth when pitching broadcasters. Third, the remaining legacy owners—several of whom bought in at $10-15 million between 2003 and 2010—are watching the Valkyries' number to time their own sales. Two franchises, the Indiana Fever and Connecticut Sun, are believed to be in quiet exploratory talks with private equity groups, per league sources.
The Valkyries' revenue model is unusual. They share Chase Center with the NBA Warriors, paying a per-game facilities fee rather than arena rent, and retain 100% of ticket and concession revenue. Average ticket price in their inaugural season was $140, compared to a league average of $72. Attendance averaged 11,420 across 20 home dates, third in the league behind Las Vegas and New York. Local sponsorship revenue—anchored by deals with Salesforce, Charles Schwab, and Levi's—came in 40% above league average, according to a person familiar with the team's financials.
The franchise also benefits from shared services with the Warriors' front office, reducing general and administrative spend by an estimated $4-6 million annually. The same structure exists in Los Angeles, where the Sparks share Crypto.com Arena with the Lakers, though the Sparks do not own their venue or control premium inventory. The Valkyries do, a distinction that shows up in Sportico's real estate component.
The $1 billion threshold is not speculative. Three family offices approached Lacob's group in March with unsolicited bids for minority stakes at valuations implying a $950 million-$1.1 billion enterprise value, according to a person briefed on the offers. Lacob declined. The thinking inside the organization is that the franchise will cross $1 billion in the next valuation cycle—likely mid-2027—without selling equity, preserving governance control and avoiding the structural complications of institutional LP stakes.
What happens next depends on Portland. If the 2028 expansion team opens strong and approaches $600-700 million in its first Sportico ranking, the Valkyries' number becomes the floor, not the ceiling. If Portland stumbles, Golden State remains an outlier tied to Warriors infrastructure rather than a replicable WNBA model.
Watch for two things: whether Lacob's group adds a second minority investor before the end of 2026—current cap table includes Lacob, his son Kirk, and Warriors president Brandon Schneider—and whether the league's Board of Governors votes in October to raise the expansion fee floor for future markets to $200 million. The Valkyries already changed the math. The vote will show whether the rest of the league believes it.
The takeaway
**$850M** Valkyries valuation sets new WNBA comp floor, pressuring Portland expansion math and 2027 media rights pitch.
wnbavaluationsgolden state valkyriesexpansionwomen's sportsfranchise sales
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