Inter Miami is worth $1.2 billion, according to updated franchise valuations released this week, placing it ahead of LAFC and every other Major League Soccer club. The figure marks a 22% increase from the previous valuation cycle and cements the Florida franchise as the league's commercial flagship 18 months after signing Lionel Messi.
LAFC, which carried the top slot at $1 billion in the prior assessment, now sits second. The shift reflects Miami's gate revenue surge, expanded sponsorship pipeline, and the global television audience Messi commands. Average attendance at Chase Stadium climbed to 20,142 in 2024, up from 14,919 the season before Messi arrived. Broadcast deals with AppleTV+ and international partners began repricing Miami fixtures above the league standard; a person familiar with MLS media negotiations said the club's matches now carry a 15-20% premium in certain Asian and European markets.
For Jorge Mas, the principal owner who paid roughly $25 million for his initial stake in 2021, the valuation establishes a reference point worth watching when MLS opens its next expansion window. The league has signaled it will add at least one more franchise before the 2026 World Cup, with San Diego and Las Vegas the reported finalists. Expansion fees have climbed from $200 million in 2019 to $500 million for Charlotte FC in 2022. A $1.2 billion comp gives Mas and his partners leverage if they ever entertain a minority sale; family offices sizing stakes in U.S. sports franchises now have a Florida data point that didn't exist when David Beckham's ownership group first materialized.
Sponsorship revenue is the cleaner signal. Miami added nine new partners in 2024, including a front-of-kit deal with Royal Caribbean that sources pegged north of $10 million annually. Adidas renegotiated its kit contract mid-term, a rare occurrence outside of contract expiry windows, reportedly doubling the annual guarantee. The club's commercial staff grew from 12 to 31 full-time employees between July 2023 and December 2024, per filings reviewed by people tracking MLS hiring. That headcount reflects inbound volume, not speculative outreach.
The valuation also clarifies the stakes for Messi's next contract decision. His current deal runs through December 2025, with a club option for 2026. If he leaves, Miami's gate and sponsor economics compress; if he stays, the franchise has one more season to extract value before his age-39 year. Mas has said publicly he expects Messi to remain through the World Cup, but no extension has been signed. Meanwhile, the club's technical staff is already sketching post-Messi roster shapes, a process that began last fall when the front office hired two additional scouts focused on South American markets.
MLS will release full financial data for all 30 clubs in March, including revenue breakdowns and debt service ratios. Miami's operating margin—revenue minus expenses before ownership distributions—will clarify whether the $1.2 billion valuation reflects sustainable cash flow or Messi-era momentum that reverts when he exits. LAFC's ownership group, which includes Will Ferrell, Magic Johnson, and private-equity firm Arctos Partners, has not commented on the ranking shift.
Watch for minority stake discussions before the summer transfer window. Private-equity firms that missed LAFC's 2022 Arctos round are circling Miami, according to two people who field inbound calls for Mas's group. Chase Stadium's naming-rights deal expires in 2027, and early renewal talks are expected to start this spring, with the $1.2 billion valuation resetting the floor price. Messi's contract decision will likely surface by mid-summer, either in a formal announcement or through his agent's renewed silence.
The takeaway
Miami's **$1.2B** valuation is the new MLS comp for expansion fees, minority stakes, and sponsor pricing—if Messi signs through 2026.
inter miamimls valuationlionel messijorge masfranchise economicsexpansion
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