The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) has quickly risen to be one of the most commercially powerful sports properties worldwide.
In 2025 alone, they generated $1.5 billion in revenue, a 7% increase YoY at an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 57% (one of the highest in any major sports property). If you were to spread these results over the roughly 43 events per year, that means it generates around $35 million in revenue per event. This figure is very rough, however, as UFC doesn’t only generate cash from their fights. They have a game, intellectual property, and more.
What the UFC Makes Per Event

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The UFC makes about $35 million per event with all revenue sources included. However, if we actually look at the revenue generated from just the event itself, in the US, it’s around $5 to $15 million in ticket sales, broadcast fees, and partner activities. As you can imagine, there are some outliers here. Massive PPV events featuring big stars like Conor McGregor, Jon Jones, or any major title fight make significantly more. Some reports suggest these can generate $50 to $100 million per event. You then have international events with government-paid site fees. A good example of this is the fights in Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi. Though the numbers aren’t available, there are mentions of these fights generating eight-figures plus.
How the UFC Makes Its Money

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Their main revenue source is media rights and content distribution. In 2025, this was $907.7 million. They’ve also just signed a $7.7 billion seven-year deal with Paramount+, which will start in 2026. Sponsorships follow closely behind. 2025 saw sponsorship revenue of over $300 million, up 25% YoY. This was driven by major brand deals from Monster Energy, Crypto.com, Meta, and their gambling sponsor.
The gambling sponsor is a huge driver. Platforms that allow you to play bingo games, like 75 or 90-ball bingo, alongside other classic casino offerings, provide potentially massive payouts for sports companies. Many sources say a gambling sponsor can provide a multi-year deal in the tens of millions. Live events and hospitality provided the company with $232.9 million in 2025. This revenue comes from ticket sales, site fees, and corporate hospitality at the events themselves.
The Costs Behind Each Event
Running a UFC event ranges anywhere from $5 to $15 million per event. It ranges massively due to the type of event, location, and so forth. They’ll happily spend more on a UFC card featuring McGregor, for example, than a lower-value card that might not generate as much revenue.
What Will Change in the Future
The UFC financial future is looking as strong as ever. It’ll continue like this as well. With Paramount’s deal kicking in this year, they’ll have a healthy revenue stream for the next few years. Over the last 10 or so years, the sport has gotten more popular as well. One of their recent events, UFC 324, reached 7.18 million households, which, while behind the NFL and NBA numbers, is remarkably impressive for the sport.
