ESPN inks five-year deal for WWE’s live premium events including WrestleMania, Royal Rumble

ESPN inks five-year deal for WWE’s live premium events including WrestleMania, Royal Rumble


Triple H looks on during WrestleMania 41 Saturday at Allegiant Stadium on April 19, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Georgiana Dallas | WWE | Getty Images

The WWE is coming to ESPN.

The Disney-controlled sports and entertainment business will pay an average of $325 million per year for five years of U.S. rights to the WWE’s biggest live events, including WrestleMania, the Royal Rumble and SummerSlam, beginning in 2026, according to people familiar with the matter who declined to be naming speaking about the deal specifics. Spokespeople at WWE and ESPN declined to comment.

NBCUniversal’s Peacock had previously paid $180 million per year over five years for the package, according to two people familiar with the matter.

All 10 of the WWE’s premium live events each year will stream on ESPN’s new $29.99 per month direct-to-consumer platform in the U.S. Select events will be simulcast on ESPN’s linear networks.

Disney reported quarterly earnings Wednesday that showed domestic ESPN revenue up 1% to $3.93 billion.

Get the CNBC Sport newsletter directly to your inbox

The CNBC Sport newsletter with Alex Sherman brings you the biggest news and exclusive interviews from the worlds of sports business and media, delivered weekly to your inbox.

Subscribe here to get access today.

The WWE and ESPN have strategically moved closer together in recent years, said TKO Group President and Chief Operating Officer Mark Shapiro in an interview. TKO is the controlling owner of WWE. Shapiro, himself, was a top executive at ESPN in the early 2000s.

“In many ways, this is our destiny,” said Shapiro. “If you want to expand the audience, our fan base, the fervor around WWE, and grow on a real significant national scale, you can’t do that as it relates to the sports world without partnering with ESPN.”

ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro said he would have been interested in bidding on the package of events even if ESPN weren’t about to debut its new streaming service. Still, adding the events, for no extra charge, for subscribers of the digital product will help reduce churn for professional wrestling and help expand ESPN beyond traditional sports.

“Our place was built as the entertainment and sports programing network,” said Pitaro, referencing the literal meaning of the acronym, “ESPN.” “This is a fantastic way for us to expand our audience. It’s younger, it’s more diverse, and it’s more female than what we see at the network level.”

Thirty-eight percent of WWE’s audience is women, noted WWE President Nick Khan. About 50% of people who attend WWE live events come with children, he said in an interview.

“It’s multigenerational viewing, and we think ESPN is multigenerational viewing,” said Khan.

In 2024, the WWE signed a 10-year, $5 billion deal with Netflix to stream “Raw” every Monday night, beginning this year. Netflix will continue to stream marquee WWE events outside the U.S.

“SmackDown,” which airs Fridays on USA Network, will continue to stream on Peacock. That deal expires in 2029, according to people familiar with the matter.

Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC and USA Network.

Clarification: This story has been updated to clarify that ESPN will hold the rights to stream WWE premium live events in the U.S. Netflix holds those rights outside the U.S.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO



Source

One in three Manhattan condo owners lost money when they sold in the last year
Business

One in three Manhattan condo owners lost money when they sold in the last year

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. More than a third of the condo apartments sold in Manhattan over roughly the past year sold at a loss, although the top end of […]

Read More
With two months to Christmas, here’s what retail leaders expect for holiday shopping
Business

With two months to Christmas, here’s what retail leaders expect for holiday shopping

There’s just two months until Christmas Eve, and retailers are meeting a more cautious shopper with earlier offerings. Most retailers won’t report third-quarter results or updated holiday expectations until just before Thanksgiving, largely considered the sector’s most important week of the year. By then, many shoppers will have already started checking off holiday shopping lists. […]

Read More
Deckers Brands stock sinks more than 12% after soft outlook raises concerns about Hoka, Ugg growth
Business

Deckers Brands stock sinks more than 12% after soft outlook raises concerns about Hoka, Ugg growth

Hoka shoes are seen in a store in Krakow, Poland on February 1, 2023.  Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Getty Images Shares of footwear maker Deckers Brands plunged more than 12% Friday after the company trimmed its sales guidance for Hoka and Ugg — the two brands driving its growth — over concerns that tariffs are […]

Read More