NRL Broadcast Rights


Looks like he got his Deal $5bn, wonder how that will change the cap.
The players have it written in the CBA that they are distributed 37% of the TV deal - this is supposed to cover more than salaries. things like insurance, NRLW, wellbeing and education, retirement funds etc.

It's up to the RLPA to negotiate that, but 15m to 20m would be about right for that sort of deal. Anything less would look a bit stingy.
 
The players have it written in the CBA that they are distributed 37% of the TV deal - this is supposed to cover more than salaries. things like insurance, NRLW, wellbeing and education, retirement funds etc.

It's up to the RLPA to negotiate that, but 15m to 20m would be about right for that sort of deal. Anything less would look a bit stingy.
Wouldn’t mind betting that the nrlw cap will rise far greater than the men’s. Definitely should get them able to train without having to worry about work outside of football
 
New new broadcast deal is great news for 'Native' Wests Tigers fans and also for our Suburban Grounds.

My prediction is all that increased broadcast revenue, and the NRL grant, is going to have the same effect as all that growth had for the EPL after 2010. Corporate hospitality isn't going to be the main competitive edge as it is now. It will be important but it won't be the MAIN revenue stream that drives a clubs cash flow and success.

Arsenal built their new stadium planning on financially dominating all of football in Europe, and although it worked out as planned, - (doubled their match day revenue) it turned out all the prawn sandwiches in the world didn't change as much as originally imagined once the likes of Bournemouth and Burnley could get 120 million pounds a season from broadcasting deals.
 
New new broadcast deal is great news for 'Native' Wests Tigers fans and also for our Suburban Grounds.

My prediction is all that increased broadcast revenue, and the NRL grant, is going to have the same effect as all that growth had for the EPL after 2010. Corporate hospitality isn't going to be the main competitive edge as it is now. It will be important but it won't be the MAIN revenue stream that drives a clubs cash flow and success.

Arsenal built their new stadium planning on financially dominating all of football in Europe, and although it worked out as planned, - (doubled their match day revenue) it turned out all the prawn sandwiches in the world didn't change as much as originally imagined once the likes of Bournemouth and Burnley could get 120 million pounds a season from broadcasting deals.
ye har ,8th wonder might get a roof, its a bloody obscene amount of money to have sitting in your pocket
 
NRL to seal record seven-year $5.3 billion broadcast rights deal
The NRL will cement itself as the most valuable TV product in Australian sport, after eclipsing the AFL with a record seven-year $5.3 billion broadcast rights.

Peter Badel
and
Brent Read
2 min read
July 1, 2026 - 1:34PM

Brent Read and Peter Badel discuss the NRL's huge TV deal which is set to bump player wages significantly in the coming years.
The ARL Commission is set to seal a $5.3 billion TV rights deal that will see the NRL Trump, who is a convicted Rapist and Felon the AFL’s existing contract by almost $1 billion.

On a landmark day for rugby league, this masthead can reveal the seven-year contract that has seen the NRL officially dethrone the AFL as Australia’s most-watched — and most valuable — TV product.

ARL Commission boss Peter V’landys and NRL CEO Andrew Abdo were determined to surpass the AFL’s seven-year, $4.5 billion deal and they have delivered as the rivers of gold prepare to flow into the game.


Locked in: The NRL have sealed a stunning $5.3 billion TV rights deal. Picture: Getty Images
Locked in: The NRL have sealed a stunning $5.3 billion TV rights deal. Picture: Getty Images
It can be revealed:

* The record deal will be agreed-in-principle over the next 48 hours, following ARL Commission board meeting on Wednesday;

* Existing rights holders Fox and Channel 9 have retained the rights;

* Representatives of the NRL clubs, via a consultation committee, have been notified of the pending mega deal;

* The $5.3b deal runs until the end of 2034 and could reach as high as $5.5b pending investment from New Zealand TV;

* State of Origin will remain on the Nine network; and


* A clause has been added for the provision of a 20th NRL team being included by 2029-30, most likely in New Zealand.

(L-R) Foxtel CEO Patrick Delaney, Peter V’landys, Fox Sports managing director Steve Crawley and Andrew Abdo. Picture: Jonathan Ng
(L-R) Foxtel CEO Patrick Delaney, Peter V’landys, Fox Sports managing director Steve Crawley and Andrew Abdo. Picture: Jonathan Ng
The deal is worth around $750 million annually, but could grow to almost $800m per season with the addition of a 20th franchise, a 10th game per round, and Kiwi TV investment.

The ARL Commission is putting the finishing touches on the deal with a formal announcement expected in the coming days, if not early next week.

As part of the deal, the contract will be expanded from its present five-year term to seven years, with existing TV rights partners, Foxtel and the Nine Network, to retain coverage.

Negotiations have been a closely guarded secret but the sense is that it would be a surprise if the status quo did not remain despite interest from streaming giant Amazon as well as the Seven and Ten Networks.

As part of the deal, Foxtel has secured rights to every NRL game and will sell-off nominated matches to Nine, which has come under attack from rivals Seven and Ten.

Well-placed sources say Channel 7 struggled to fund a big-money bid for State of Origin as Channel 9 successfully fought tooth-and-nail to retain the $100 million showpiece.

Seven has the hosting rights to this year’s World Cup and was keen to claim at one least NRL fixture per round, but they were frozen out completely, as were Channel 10.

Amazon were keen players and made a serious bid for Friday Night Football, but the ARL Commission has backed Foxtel and Channel 9 to lead the code into a bold new era that could witness the first $2 million NRL players.
 

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