What Would New WNBA Salaries Look Like in 2026?
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What could a top WNBA player earn in 2026 and beyond? Six figures? A million dollars? Or a truly revolutionary multi-million dollar salary?
The answer is being decided right now in negotiations for the league’s new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), which expires on October 31st. The final number depends entirely on which financial blueprint the league and its players can agree on.
To understand what new WNBA salaries could look like, we don’t have to guess. We just have to look at the proven, billion-dollar model used by their NBA counterparts and apply it to the WNBA’s new financial reality.
The Blueprint for Million-Dollar Salaries: The NBA Model
The NBA’s salaries are not arbitrary; they are the direct result of a negotiated partnership that turns league revenue into player paychecks.
Here’s how the NBA’s revenue directly translates into its salary cap, using real, projected numbers for the 2025-26 season:
Step 1: Determine the Player’s Total Share. The NBA’s total revenue is over $11 billion, a large portion of which is counted as Basketball Related Income (BRI). The CBA mandates that players receive 50% of this BRI. For the 2025-26 season, this created a total salary pool for all players of approximately $4.638 billion.
Step 2: Divide the Pool by the Number of Teams. That $4.638 billion pot is then divided evenly among the 30 teams in the league.
The Math: $4.638 Billion / 30 teams = $154.6 Million.
This final number—$154.6 million—becomes the official team salary cap. That cap, in turn, dictates the maximum salary a single player can earn (which is set as a percentage of the cap) and all other player contracts.
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Projecting the Future: Two Paths for WNBA Salaries
The WNBA’s current economic model results in players receiving a share of league revenue that is approximately 10%. Using the WNBA’s new, conservatively projected annual revenue of $400 million, we can see what salaries would look like when that revenue is split across the 15 teams set for the 2026 season.
Path A: The Current WNBA Model (~10% Share)
If the league maintains its current structure, the new revenue would create a total player salary pool of $40 million (10% of $400M).
- The Math: $40,000,000 / 15 teams = $2,666,666
- New Team Salary Cap: Approximately $2.67 million
- What a Max Salary Would Look Like: In the $500,000 – $600,000 range.
- What a Top Rookie Would Earn: Around $150,000.
Path B: The NBA Partnership Model (~40-50% Share)
If the WNBA adopts the NBA’s partnership blueprint, a 40% share of revenue would create a total player salary pool of $160 million.
- The Math: $160,000,000 / 15 teams = $10,666,666
- New Team Salary Cap: Approximately $10.67 million
- What a Max Salary Would Look Like: $1.5 – $2+ million per year.
- What a Top Rookie Would Earn: A starting salary in the $250,000 – $300,000+ range.
The Billion-Dollar Question: Why Wouldn’t the WNBA Adopt This Model?
Seeing the numbers, the natural question is: why would the league even consider Path A?
The holdup is historical. The 10% model is a relic from the WNBA’s “investment phase,” when owners subsidized the league and absorbed losses. Now that the league is a high-growth business, owners are positioned to see a major return on that long-term investment, and sharing 40-50% of the revenue would cut into that return significantly.
The players’ union, however, is arguing that the investment has matured. The players are the partners driving today’s record-breaking revenue and deserve to be compensated as such. They are not asking for a handout, but for the same proven, revenue-sharing partnership that allowed the NBA to grow into a financial juggernaut from its own unprofitable past.
So, what will new WNBA salaries look like? They could be a respectable step forward. Or they could be revolutionary, creating a new class of multi-millionaire athletes with salaries finally befitting a league that has long proclaimed itself the home of the best players in the world.
Is a $1.5M+ salary worth a potential lockout?
Helpful Links
- WNBA and Players Union Reach Historic New CBA Agreement
- The WNBA’s CBA Explained: How a New Deal Shapes the Draft
- NBA salary cap rises max 10% to $154.6M for 2025-26
- WNBA secures ‘monumental’ media deal with Disney, Amazon, NBC
- WNBA’s CBA negotiations: From rev sharing to potential lockout
- Back to WNBA Draft News



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