Every National Hockey League franchise is now valued above $1 billion, according to CNBC's 2026 franchise valuations published this week, with the top tier clearing $4 billion for the first time in league history. The league-wide floor represents a watershed moment for the smallest-market clubs and a validation point for family offices that entered the sport during the pandemic expansion cycle.
The rise tracks closely with two structural tailwinds: the $88 million salary cap ceiling for the 2025-26 season, up from $83.5 million the prior year, and the league's national media agreements with ESPN and Turner Sports that delivered a combined $625 million annually starting in 2021. Those deals, which run through 2028, tripled the league's prior broadcast revenue and shifted the revenue-sharing calculus for clubs in non-traditional markets. The Arizona Coyotes, sold and relocated to Utah in 2024, had been valued at $675 million in CNBC's prior ranking; the Utah Hockey Club debuted on this year's list north of $1.1 billion, a function of ownership certainty and arena economics in Salt Lake City.
For ownership groups, the valuation compression at the bottom matters more than the headline figures at the top. The league's smallest-market franchises—historically clustered in the $400 million to $700 million range as recently as 2020—now sit within 15% of the billion-dollar threshold, narrowing the pricing gap for succession planning and minority stake transactions. Family offices sizing positions in the sport can no longer cherry-pick distressed Sun Belt assets at steep discounts; the floor has moved. The shift also recalibrates leverage in expansion conversations. Commissioner Gary Bettman has repeatedly signaled openness to a 34-team league, with Houston and Atlanta as speculative candidates. A $1 billion floor sets the implicit expansion fee baseline, likely pushing actual bids toward $1.2 billion to $1.4 billion to avoid diluting existing franchise values.
The top-tier clubs—expected to include the Toronto Maple Leafs, New York Rangers, and Montreal Canadiens—are now comfortably in the $4 billion-plus bracket, placing them in rough parity with mid-tier NBA franchises and ahead of all but a handful of MLB clubs. That convergence matters for institutional allocators building North American sports portfolios: the NHL is no longer the price-conscious alternative to basketball, it is a parallel asset class with its own scarcity premium. The Maple Leafs, majority-owned by Rogers Communications and BCE Inc. through Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, are unlikely to trade hands, but minority stakes in that entity have historically priced at steep premiums to comparable revenue multiples in other leagues. The Rangers, controlled by James Dolan's Madison Square Garden Sports Corp., sit on Manhattan real estate that complicates enterprise value calculations but anchors the $4 billion estimate.
Sponsor valuations are adjusting in real time. Jersey patch deals, introduced league-wide in 2022, have climbed from initial $4 million to $6 million annual commitments to $8 million-plus for Original Six markets, with the Maple Leafs' deal reportedly clearing $10 million annually. Helmet advertising, legalized the same year, added another $2 million to $3 million per club. Those incremental revenue streams—modest individually but material in aggregate—flow directly to operating income and lift EBITDA multiples used in franchise appraisals. The league's gambling partnerships, including a $1 billion relationship with MGM Resorts and subsequent deals with DraftKings and FanDuel, add another $30 million to $40 million in annual league-wide revenue, distributed unevenly based on market size and digital engagement metrics.
What to watch: the next national media negotiation cycle begins informally in 2027, with rights renewals or re-bids expected by early 2028. If the league can push total annual broadcast revenue past $750 million—a 20% increase over current deals—franchise valuations will likely reset higher again, potentially putting a half-dozen clubs past $5 billion by 2030. Expansion announcements, if they come, will likely surface in late 2026 or early 2027, once the Atlanta and Houston ownership groups finish assembling arena financing. Minority stake transactions in the 10% to 15% range will be the near-term liquidity events to track, particularly among clubs that brought in institutional capital during the 2020-2022 window and are now facing step-up pricing provisions.
The billion-dollar floor is now the baseline. The clubs that can't reach $2 billion within five years will be the ones facing succession questions.
The takeaway
The NHL's full-billion franchise floor resets expansion pricing and eliminates distressed Sun Belt discounts for family offices.
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