Dana White exits UFC contract talks entirely as $7.7B Paramount deal reshapes negotiation structure
Hunter Campbell now sole point of contact for fighter deals; White's removal follows years of pay-dispute opacity and new corporate ownership dynamics.
Published May 28, 2026Source Yahoo SportsFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
UFC
PLATINUM · May 28, 2026
HENRI IV· May 28, 2026
Dana White exits UFC contract talks entirely as $7.7B Paramount deal reshapes negotiation structure
Hunter Campbell now sole point of contact for fighter deals; White's removal follows years of pay-dispute opacity and new corporate ownership dynamics.
UFC president Dana White no longer participates in fighter contract negotiations, a structural shift formalized after the promotion's $7.7 billion acquisition by Paramount. Hunter Campbell, UFC chief business officer, is now the exclusive negotiator for all roster deals, according to multiple fighters and their representatives. White confirmed the change publicly this week without ceremony.
The move follows two decades of White serving as the public face—and frequent lightning rod—of UFC compensation disputes. White's blunt negotiating style and habit of discussing fighter pay in press conferences made him a proxy target for criticism over disclosed purses that often failed to include backend points, performance bonuses, or ancillary revenue shares. Removing him from the table insulates the promotion's most visible executive from direct accountability while consolidating deal-making authority under Campbell, a former gaming regulator who joined UFC in 2012 and has quietly managed franchise agreements, broadcast deals, and high-value athlete extensions for years.
The Paramount transaction, which closed in late 2024, brought private equity oversight and institutional governance expectations that favour formal chain-of-command structures over personality-driven dealmaking. Campbell reports directly to Paramount's sports division president, not to White. This matters for fighters with representation accustomed to leveraging White's media commitments or public statements as negotiating pressure. That channel is now closed. Agents now prepare term sheets for Campbell's desk, where conversations happen without the threat—or theatre—of a Dana White scrum quote 48 hours later.
Fighter pay remains structurally opaque. UFC discloses only a fraction of total compensation: disclosed purses average $150,000 per main-card bout, but bonuses, pay-per-view points for marquee names, and compliance incentives are not reported. The promotion's revenue split with athletes is estimated at 16-20% of total revenue, compared to 48-50% in NBA and NFL models. White's departure from negotiations does not alter the underlying economics, but it does shift the locus of leverage. Campbell is less likely to promise a title shot in exchange for a hometown discount, and more likely to present a tiered grid: X wins equal Y raise, Z pay-per-view buys trigger bonus.
Colby Covington's recent comments—"I wasn't let go, Hunter cleared my wrestling move"—illustrate the new dynamic. Fighters now reference Campbell by name when discussing contract mechanics, a marked change from the White-dominated era. Conor McGregor's contract status, subject to ongoing speculation, will be resolved by Campbell, not by White in a post-fight interview. McGregor's existing deal, signed in 2021, includes two remaining fights and backend points tied to gate and broadcast; any extension or buyout will be negotiated at Campbell's desk, with Paradigm Sports presenting financials Paramount's legal and finance teams will audit.
What to watch: UFC's next major contract renewals come in Q2 2025, when 12 ranked fighters across three divisions reach expiration. Campbell's negotiating posture—whether he offers fighter-friendly profit-sharing clauses or demands longer-term exclusivity—will define the promotion's talent-retention model under Paramount ownership. Also: whether White's removal extends to future performance-bonus discretion, traditionally announced by him cage-side.
Campbell's first test arrives in March, when the promotion renegotiates its apparel deal with Venum. White previously handled those discussions. Venum's existing contract pays UFC $6 million annually; fighters receive kit allocations but no cash. The renewal window is also when ranked fighters typically leverage outside offers. Campbell's predecessor moves left that door open. His don't.
The takeaway
White out of fighter talks; Campbell now sole negotiator as **$7.7B** Paramount deal imposes institutional structure over personality-driven dealmaking.
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