How much has Caitlin Clark helped the WNBA grow? Since joining the Indiana Fever last season, Clark has been seen as a generational talent with the potential to reshape the league.

After Clark entered the WNBA, reports about her impact and the economic boost she brought began to surface. Now that she’s in her season with the Fever, financial experts have started making bold projections about what she could mean for the league’s future.

Financial Expert Boldly Predicts Caitlin Clark's Economic Impact on WNBA  Will Eclipse $1,000,000,000 In Near Future | PFSN

Can Caitlin Clark Turn the WNBA Into a $1 Billion Establishment?

The WNBA is affiliated with the NBA and has reportedly relied on financial support from it to grow in the past. While the league’s revenue numbers aren’t public, Clark’s arrival has clearly raised the league’s profile and long-term potential.

Ryan Brewer, a finance professor at Indiana University Columbus, says it’s hard to fully measure Clark’s impact. Still, he estimates she’s responsible for about 25.6% of the WNBA’s growth over the last year. That’s a huge number for one player in a league with hundreds.

In an interview with NBC News, Brewer said Clark’s value could grow fast. “If things just go as they were, and we have an expanded season of 22 home games with modest inflation, I’m looking at $875 [million] … and I could easily see that eclipsing $1 billion on the economic impact of Caitlin Clark this year.”

Clark is only 23 and just starting her second season. The idea that she could drive the WNBA to nearly a billion dollars in revenue is incredible. Fans are already asking what she might do for the WNBA five years from now, once she hits her prime.

The WNBA has been preparing for expansion for years. In 2024, the W had 12 teams. This year, it added a 13th — the Golden State Valkyries. The league is expected to expand again soon, with the Toronto Tempo and an unnamed team in Portland coming soon.

 

This is all good news for the WNBA. From TV ratings to merch and ticket sales, everything is up. Fever games now cost more than Indiana Pacers games, beating the city’s NBA team in ticket demand. That says a lot about Clark’s value.

Now the question is: Can she keep this up and help change the league forever? Clark is already seeing massive numbers to start her sophomore campaign, and women’s basketball as a whole is on the up.