The confetti from the WNBA’s record-breaking growth hasn’t even settled, and already, the league is staring into the abyss. With less than 100 days until the scheduled tip-off of the historic 30th season, the WNBA and its players’ union (WNBPA) are not popping champagne; they are preparing for war.
This Monday, a high-stakes, emergency meeting is set to take place in New York City. This isn’t a standard check-in. It is a “Code Red” summit that will determine if professional women’s basketball is played in 2026 or if the arenas stay dark.

The Owners Step In
For the first time since the fall, the actual owners—the billionaires who sign the checks—are flying in to meet face-to-face with union leadership. They will be sitting across the table from WNBPA President Nneka Ogwumike and Vice Presidents Kelsey Plum and Napheesa Collier, who are jetting in directly from their “Unrivaled” games in Miami.
The presence of the owners signals one thing: the negotiators have failed. The situation is critical. For over four weeks, there has been radio silence between the two sides. The league reportedly stopped responding to the union’s December proposal entirely, deeming it so detached from financial reality that a counter-offer wasn’t even worth drafting.
The 30% Divide
At the heart of the standoff is a single, explosive number: 30%. The players are demanding 30% of gross revenue. They want a cut of every dollar that comes in—ticket sales, TV deals, merchandise—before a single bill is paid.
The league’s stance? Absolutely not. Their argument is cold, hard economics: The WNBA has allegedly never turned a profit in its 28-year history. The owners, many of whom also own NBA franchises, have been subsidizing the league’s losses for decades. They are willing to share net revenue (profit after expenses), but sharing gross revenue when the business is in the red would essentially mean the owners are paying the players to increase their own financial losses. They view the demand not as a negotiation tactic, but as a “non-starter.”

The “Entitlement” Trap
While the revenue split is a complex corporate battle, the public relations war is being fought on a much simpler front: housing.
According to leaks from the negotiations, the league’s current offer includes a massive salary bump, raising the average player compensation to around $500,000 annually. This is a life-changing increase from the current average of roughly $100,000. It includes better benefits, upgraded travel (charter flights), and significant base raises.
However, the union is reportedly holding firm on a demand for additional housing stipends. And this is where they are losing the crowd.
To the average fan—and certainly to the owners—the optics are terrible. Demanding that an employer pay your rent when you are making half a million dollars a year screams of entitlement. It shifts the narrative from “fighting for a fair wage” to “greedy disconnect.” As one analyst bluntly put it, “If you’re making $500,000, you can afford an apartment. You might not live in a penthouse in Manhattan, but you can figure it out like millions of Americans making far less.”
D-Day in NYC
The friction is palpable. The players argue that they are “the product.” They point to the Caitlin Clark effect, the sold-out crowds, and the skyrocketing viewership as proof that the money is there, or at least, that the value is there. They believe they have earned a piece of the top line.
The owners, conversely, feel they have put a generous, transformative offer on the table—one that respects the players’ growth without bankrupting the league. They are flying to NYC to draw a line in the sand.
Monday is the inflection point. If the union walks into that room and refuses to budge on the 30% gross revenue or the housing demands, the talks will collapse. There is no more time for posturing. Rosters need to be built, training camps need to be scheduled, and logistics need to be finalized.
If a framework for a deal isn’t reached by Monday night, the “celebration” of the WNBA’s 30th season will be replaced by the silence of a lockout. The league has never been more popular, yet it has never been closer to disappearing.
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