Ever daydreamed about owning an NFL team? Picture it: your own private box, a say in who gets drafted, and a front-row seat every Sunday. It sounds like a fantasy only a billionaire could live out.
But here’s the wild part. Owning a piece of the NFL hasn’t just been a dream for the ultra-rich — it has quietly turned into one of the best investments anyone has ever made.
Go back far enough, and some of these teams sold for less than a used car. The Chicago Bears changed hands for just $100 back in 1920. The New York Giants cost $500 in 1925. The Pittsburgh Steelers sold for $2,500 in 1933. None of these buyers were hedge fund managers or private equity moguls. They were local businessmen taking a gamble on a sport that hadn’t yet become America’s obsession.
Fast forward to 2026, and that gamble has paid off in a way nobody could have predicted.
Every NFL Team Is Now Worth Billions
By the middle of 2026, something remarkable happened: every single NFL franchise was valued at $5 billion or more. The league-wide average value climbed to roughly $7.1 billion per team.
The Dallas Cowboys pushed things even further, becoming the first franchise in any sport to cross the $13 billion mark.
Then, just when it seemed like values couldn’t climb any higher, the Seattle Seahawks blew past every expectation.
The Seahawks Sale That Reset the Market
In July 2026, the estate of the late Paul G. Allen agreed to sell the Seattle Seahawks — fresh off a Super Bowl win — to a group led by father-and-son investors Vinod and Neal Khosla. The reported price? A jaw-dropping $9.612 billion.
That number didn’t just break the NFL’s previous sales record. It smashed it by more than $3.5 billion.
Who Are the Khoslas?
Vinod Khosla isn’t new to big bets. He co-founded Sun Microsystems decades ago before launching Khosla Ventures, a firm known for early investments in companies like OpenAI, DoorDash, and Instacart. His son, Neal, runs an AI healthcare company called Curai Health.
Here’s the twist: the Khosla family already owned a small stake in the San Francisco 49ers, one of the Seahawks’ fiercest rivals. Since the NFL doesn’t allow anyone to hold ownership in two teams at once, the family will have to sell that 49ers stake before they can officially take over in Seattle.
Why the Seahawks Deal Is Such a Big Deal
Paul Allen bought the Seahawks back in 1997 for $194 million. At the time, the purchase was seen as a rescue mission — it kept the team from potentially moving to Southern California and helped get what’s now known as Lumen Field built.
Compare that $194 million to the $9.612 billion sale price, and the numbers are almost hard to believe:
- Original price: $194 million
- Sale price: $9.612 billion
- Value gained: $9.418 billion
- Return: About 49.5 times the original investment
- Percentage increase: Roughly 4,855%
That price also topped the league’s previous record by nearly 59%. The old mark was set in 2023, when Josh Harris’s group bought the Washington Commanders for $6.05 billion.
What makes the Seahawks sale stand out even more is the timing. Seattle wasn’t a struggling franchise looking for a lifeline. The team had a winning coach, a respected front office, a modern stadium, and a roster built to keep competing — all while coming off a championship season.
Private Equity Changed the Game
Back in August 2024, NFL owners voted to let approved private equity firms buy small, non-controlling stakes in teams. That single decision opened the door for a flood of new money into the league — without forcing owners to give up control.
A few deals show just how much demand there is for even a small slice of an NFL franchise:
- Miami Dolphins: Owner Stephen Ross reportedly turned down offers close to $15 billion for a package that included the Dolphins, Hard Rock Stadium, and the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix. He kept control but sold a minority stake to Ares Management at an $8.1 billion valuation.
- New England Patriots: Robert Kraft sold 8% of the team at a valuation near $9 billion, proving just how much investors are willing to pay for even a partial ownership stake.
- Las Vegas Raiders: Owner Mark Davis brought in Tom Brady as a part-owner, adding serious star power to a franchise now valued at about $7.7 billion.
Private equity didn’t cause the NFL’s valuation boom on its own, but it gave existing owners a much bigger pool of buyers to work with — and gave outside investors a way in, even without buying an entire team.
What Every NFL Team Is Worth Right Now
Here’s a full breakdown of current team values, original purchase prices, and how much each franchise has grown since:
| Team & Owner(s) | Current Value | Original Price | Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arizona Cardinals — Bidwill family | $5.5B | $50,000 (1933) | +10,999,900% |
| Atlanta Falcons — Arthur Blank | $6.35B | $545M (2002) | +1,065% |
| Baltimore Ravens — Steve Bisciotti | $6.1B | $600M (2004) | +917% |
| Buffalo Bills — Terry Pegula & Arctos Partners | $5.95B | $1.4B (2014) | +325% |
| Carolina Panthers — David Tepper | $5.7B | $2.27B (2018) | +151% |
| Chicago Bears — McCaskey family | $8.2B | $100 (1920) | +8,199,999,900% |
| Cincinnati Bengals — Mike Brown | $5.25B | $7.5M (1967) | +69,900% |
| Cleveland Browns — Jimmy & Dee Haslam | $6.4B | $987M (2012) | +548% |
| Dallas Cowboys — Jerry Jones | $13B | $140M (1989) | +9,186% |
| Denver Broncos — Walton-Penner Group | $6.8B | $4.65B (2022) | +46% |
| Detroit Lions — Ford family | $5.4B | $4.5M (1964) | +119,900% |
| Green Bay Packers — Public/Nonprofit | $6.65B | $50 (1923) | +13,299,999,900% |
| Houston Texans — McNair family | $7.4B | $700M (1999) | +957% |
| Indianapolis Colts — Irsay family | $5.9B | $15M (1972) | +39,233% |
| Jacksonville Jaguars — Shahid Khan | $5.6B | $770M (2012) | +627% |
| Kansas City Chiefs — Hunt family | $6.2B | $25,000 (1960) | +24,799,900% |
| Las Vegas Raiders — Mark Davis, Tom Brady & others | $7.7B | $180,000 (1966) | +4,277,677% |
| Los Angeles Chargers — Spanos family | $6B | $70M (1984) | +8,471% |
| Los Angeles Rams — Stan Kroenke | $10.5B | $750M (2010) | +1,300% |
| Miami Dolphins — Stephen Ross & Ares Management | $7.5B | $1.1B (2009) | +582% |
| Minnesota Vikings — Zygi Wilf | $6.25B | $600M (2005) | +942% |
| New England Patriots — Robert Kraft | $9B | $172M (1994) | +5,133% |
| New Orleans Saints — Gayle Benson | $5.3B | $70M (1985) | +7,471% |
| New York Giants — Mara & Tisch families | $10.1B | $500 (1925) | +2,019,999,900% |
| New York Jets — Woody Johnson | $8.1B | $635M (2000) | +1,176% |
| Philadelphia Eagles — Jeffrey Lurie | $8.3B | $185M (1994) | +4,386% |
| Pittsburgh Steelers — Rooney family | $6.5B | $2,500 (1933) | +259,999,900% |
| San Francisco 49ers — DeBartolo/York family | $8.6B | $13M (1977) | +66,054% |
| Seattle Seahawks — Sale to Khosla group pending | $9.612B | $194M (1997) | +4,855% |
| Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Glazer family | $6.6B | $192M (1995) | +3,338% |
| Tennessee Titans — Amy Adams Strunk | $6.3B | $25,000 (1960) | +25,199,900% |
| Washington Commanders — Josh Harris Group | $7.6B | $6.05B (2023) | +26% |
Note: Figures reflect the most recently published valuation estimates. The Seahawks figure includes the reported July 2026 sale agreement, which still needs approval from NFL ownership.
The Green Bay Packers: The League’s Only Public Team
Every team on that list has one thing in common — except the Green Bay Packers. While every other franchise is owned by a billionaire, a family, or an investment group, the Packers belong to their fans.
More than 537,000 people own shares in the team, but don’t expect to get rich off them. Shares can’t be resold for profit, they don’t pay dividends, and they don’t come with the perks you’d normally expect from owning stock.
Founded in 1919 and officially incorporated in 1923, the Packers still hold their own against every other team financially. Despite playing in the smallest market in major American sports, the franchise is worth an estimated $6.65 billion, thanks to shared league revenue, a long history of winning, and the timeless appeal of Lambeau Field.
The Bottom Line
The NFL has turned into one of the strongest investment stories in modern history. A national TV deal, a strict salary cap, shared revenue between teams, and a hard limit of just 32 franchises have created something unlike any other market in sports.
Paul Allen’s Seahawks purchase says it all. What started as a $194 million move to save a team from leaving Seattle grew into a Super Bowl-winning franchise worth nearly $10 billion.
The hardest part about investing in an NFL team isn’t the price — it’s getting the chance to buy one in the first place. Franchises rarely go up for sale, and when they do, bidding wars between billionaires and investment groups can send prices soaring far past even the highest estimates.
If NFL owners approve the Seahawks sale, the $9.612 billion price tag won’t just close out the Paul Allen era. It will set a brand-new bar for what it costs to become an NFL owner.
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