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WNBA board of governors unanimously ratifies new CBA

By Thomson Reuters Mar 24, 2026 | 3:39 PM

The WNBA Board of Governors has unanimously ratified the terms for the new collective bargaining agreement, the league announced Tuesday.

The seven-year agreement goes into effect with the 2026 season and ​runs through 2032.

The WNBA and Women’s National Basketball Players Association ‌will now finalize the long-form agreement.

“This marks the beginning of a bold new era of the WNBA — one made possible by the passion and dedication of the players, team owners, fans, investors, partners and the entire WNBA family,” WNBA Commissioner Cathy ‌Engelbert ​said in a statement. “We remain focused on ⁠building on the unprecedented momentum ⁠around the league and preparing for our milestone 30th season, tipping off in May.”

WNBPA president Nneka Ogwumike announced Monday that the players had voted to ratify the CBA with a nearly unanimous vote.

The ​revenue-sharing deal agreed to in the new CBA hammered out this month will increase the average salary to $583,000 this season and the maximum ⁠salary to $1.4 million, while providing more than $1 ⁠billion in salaries and benefits over the contract.

The salary ​increases represent a significant jump for WNBA players. Team salary caps will ​be $7 million this season — a huge leap from $1.5 million in ‌2025 — and will be adjusted annually based on teams and league revenue growth.

The deal projects the maximum salary to reach $2.4 million by 2032, and the average salary to surpass $1 million by then. The minimum salary this ⁠season will range from $270,000 to $300,000, depending on service time. The No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 draft will earn approximately $500,000.

All players on the WNBA ⁠championship team will receive $60,000 — ‌the payout was $22,908 in 2025 — and the runners-up ⁠will receive $20,000 (up from $8,521). The Finals MVP will get a $30,000 ​bonus (up ‌from $5,000).

The season MVP will receive a $60,000 bonus, the Defensive ​Player of ⁠the Year will get $30,000 and the Rookie of the Year will receive $15,000. The All-Star Game MVP will receive $20,000.

The length of the regular season will increase to 50 games in 2027 and 2028 and 52 from 2029-32.

The WNBA Draft is slated for April 13 with training camps opening six days ​later.

–Field Level Media