The new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) has already taken effect, as we’ve clearly seen across the league. Players have signed new contracts with the kind of massive financial upgrades the agreement now allows teams to offer. A lot of other aspects of the deal have also already started being implemented. However, what had been missing, until now, was the formal legal completion that makes every piece of it officially binding.
The the WNBA and the WNBA Players Association have now taken that final step. As announced on Saturday, the two bodies have now completed and signed the long-form version of the new Collective Bargaining Agreement. This means that the agreement is now officially legally binding, and will dictate the running of the league for the forseeable future.
Looking back, the journey towards achieving the CBA agreement that has now revolutionized the league, wasn’t a straightforward one. In fact, at some point, it almost pushed the WNBA to the brink of a complete shutdown. Every single deadline that was set for reaching the agreement eventually passed without without any agreement reached. And in fact, at one point, the possibility of a strike and a league shut down appeared far more realistic than the chances of both sides actually reaching a deal.
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However, despite all these, both parties eventually reached an agreement at a point beyond which might have been the breaking point. They shook hands on a deal that dramatically improved team salary caps from $1.5 million to the $7 million under which teams operate now. The agreement also introduced a new revenue-sharing model as well as other major financial and operational changes. These are the same changes that already started across the league in different ways. And they are what is now fully official.
The completion of the long-form document is, in one sense, a legal formality. But it is a critically important one. The final text spells out every edge case, formula, and legal definition in precise terms. It will ensure that that the agreed upon terms will not be misinterpreted. And beyond that, it will serve as a legally binding roadmap for how arbitrators or courts handle resolution, in case there are any future disputes regarding salary calculations, revenue sharing, player benefits, and other league matters.
Without this final document in place, that would mean that they are only operating on the basis of a term sheet agreement, which is not as detailed and legally binding. And there can be far-reaching risks if they decide to do that. For example, one side of the agreement can claim that some part of the agreement, are not refelecting the way they had intended it to. And if that happens, then it’s back to square one, the negotiation tables again. Also, if a team violate any rules, whether relating to the new revenue-sharing model or salary calculations, this signed document provides a complete legal backing to punish the violation or properly resolve any dispute.
Ultimately, as the official announcement itself described it, “the most transformational labor agreement in women’s professional sports” is now officially cemented. And indeed, this is not just a victory for the WNBA. Beyond the WNBA, it is also a victory for women’s sports as a whole.
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The Biggest Changes in the WNBA’s New CBA
The biggest change in this CBA is, of course, the massive financial upgrade it has brought to player salaries. Specifically, with team salary caps now sitting at $7 million, the league average salary has now jumped to roughly $583,000. It was previously around $120,000. The agreement has also lifted the league’s base salary from about $66,000 to somewhere between $270,000 and $300,000.
Right now, the WNBA has 31 players earning salaries of $1 million or more. Under the old system, that number was zero. And to really put the financial growth into perspective, many players who spent years in the WNBA already, will earn more in this first year of the new CBA than they made during their entire WNBA careers combined. Players like Dallas Wings star Alanna Smith, Connecticut Sun guard Marina Mabrey, Angel Reese, Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark, among several others, are all benefiting from the dramatic salary rise.
Even for the absolute legends of the league, the difference is staggering. For example, A’ja Wilson accumulated roughly $1.5 million in total career earnings across her first eight historic MVP-winning seasons in the WNBA. Under her new contract, she will now earn approximately $1.4 million in 2026 alone. That’s almost as much as everything she has earned in eight years in the league.
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Another area that has received a massive upgrade is the rookie contract structure. With this new CBA, the top no. 1 pick in the WNBA draft will now earn $500,000 in their rookie season. With the full four-year rookie-scale contract that will total to be around $2.2 million. Under the previous system, they earned just $78,831 in Year 1, and only about $348,198 total. Beyond the lottery picks, salaries for other rookie also now range between roughly $200,000 and $305,000 under the new CBA.
Apart from finances, this new CBA also introduces major family and housing benefits. Teams now have to provide guaranteed housing stipends to help offset the high cost of living in major metropolitan markets. Teams must also substantially increase their matching contributions toward player retirement and 401(k) plans.
There has also been a major improvement in operational standards. The new CBA have now officially eliminated commercial flights for players. Instead, it mandates full charter air travel for all regular-season and postseason games. There is also the new revenue model. This guarantees players an average of nearly 20% of league-wide revenue across the life of the agreement.
It’s safe to say that this new deal has drastically changed the entire financial and operational landscape of the WNBA. The agreement will run through 2032. And it remains to be seen whether another major improvement will eventually be required once the next round of negotiations arrives.
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