The NRL has landed the richest broadcast deal in Australian sporting history, but the biggest question isn’t how much money the game has secured. It’s what Peter V’landys and Andrew Abdo plan to do with it.
The NRL’s new seven-year broadcast agreement is reportedly worth $5.3 billion, with the potential to climb to $5.5 billion if a New Zealand broadcast component is finalised. The landmark deal eclipses the AFL’s previous record agreement and guarantees rugby league unprecedented financial security through to the end of 2034.
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The agreement sees Foxtel and Kayo retain every NRL match live, while Channel Nine continues to broadcast marquee fixtures, the finals series, Grand Final and State of Origin. More importantly, however, the deal provides the financial platform for the game’s next phase of expansion.
One of the biggest revelations is the inclusion of a clause allowing the competition to expand to a 20th NRL franchise, with reports suggesting the league is targeting 2029 or 2030. While the Perth Bears will enter the competition next season as the 18th club, a second New Zealand-based franchise is widely viewed as the frontrunner to become team number 20.
Expansion is only one part of the equation.
The enormous increase in broadcast revenue is expected to flow directly into higher player salaries, larger salary caps and greater investment in grassroots rugby league.
Industry estimates suggest annual broadcast revenue could approach $750 million to $800 million, creating room for substantial increases to the salary cap over the life of the agreement. Some reports have even predicted the NRL could soon have its first $2 million-per-season player, something that would have been almost unimaginable a decade ago.
The NRL is also expected to invest heavily in participation pathways.
Peter V’Landys has repeatedly stated that expansion cannot simply be about adding more teams. The game must also produce more players, meaning junior development, regional competitions and elite pathways are all likely to receive increased funding as the league prepares for two additional clubs.
Women’s rugby league also shapes as one of the major beneficiaries.
The continued growth of the NRLW has become one of the competition’s biggest success stories, and the additional broadcast revenue gives the league greater flexibility to further increase player payments, improve facilities and continue expanding the women’s competition in coming years.
From a fan perspective, there will be very little change.
Fox League and Kayo remain the home of every game, while Nine keeps the sport’s biggest events, ensuring supporters won’t need to subscribe to multiple streaming services to watch the competition each week. That continuity is viewed as a significant win after speculation that Amazon, Channel Seven and Channel Ten could enter the bidding process.
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For V’Landys, the agreement represents more than just a television deal.
It’s proof that rugby league has become Australia’s most valuable sporting product.
Now comes the difficult part.
Spending that money wisely.
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If the NRL can use this record-breaking windfall to strengthen grassroots participation, grow the NRLW, increase player development and successfully introduce two new franchises without diluting the competition, this won’t simply be remembered as the biggest television deal in the game’s history.
It could become the deal that transformed rugby league for generations to come.
History has shown that premierships are often influenced by the recruitment decisions made before June 30.
This year’s deadline may ultimately be remembered the same way.
