How Women in Pro Sports Are Rewriting the Rules… and Getting Paid

For decades, the conversation around women’s sports has focused on pay gaps, TV ratings, and sponsorship struggles. But today? A new wave of female athletes is rewriting the rules—not just in competition, but in business.

The world’s highest-paid female athletes are proving that skill, branding, and marketability are a powerful combination. From tennis courts to freestyle skiing, these women are securing massive endorsement deals, expanding their influence beyond sports, and showing that success in women’s athletics isn’t just possible—it’s profitable.

Tennis Still Reigns Supreme

If there’s one sport that dominates this conversation, it’s tennis. Nearly every top-earning female athlete comes from the WTA, and there’s a reason for that. Tennis has something that many women’s sports still lack—global exposure, major sponsorship opportunities, and prize money on par with the men’s game at the Grand Slam level.

Take Iga Świątek, who sits at the top of the earnings list with a staggering $23.9 million in 2024. She’s not just dominating on the court—she’s becoming a global icon. Players like Naomi Osaka, Coco Gauff, and Emma Raducanu have also leveraged their success into multimillion-dollar endorsement deals, proving that tennis isn’t just a sport—it’s a business empire for the right athlete.

Coco Gauff
Photo by Carine06

And it’s not just veterans raking in the cash. Qinwen Zheng, the rising Chinese star, has already cracked the top 15 in earnings at just 21 years old. The next generation is here, and brands are taking notice.

Beyond Tennis: Other Sports Are Crashing the Party

For years, people assumed that female athletes outside of tennis couldn’t reach the same financial heights. But that’s changing—fast.

Eileen Gu, a freestyle skier, is the second-highest-paid female athlete in the world. Yes, you read that right. Not a soccer player, not a basketball star—a freestyle skier. Gu’s Olympic dominance, combined with a massive presence in the Chinese market, has turned her into an international brand. She’s secured huge endorsement deals and has even landed modeling contracts with major fashion brands.

In soccer, Alex Morgan remains the highest-paid female player, proving that the demand for women’s football is stronger than ever. And in basketball, Candace Parker continues to cash in—not just through WNBA salaries but through endorsement deals and broadcasting opportunities.

Why Brands Are Finally Paying Attention

Female athletes have always been marketable. The difference now? Brands are finally realizing their true value.

Social media has changed the game, giving athletes a direct line to their fans—and brands love that. A superstar like Coco Gauff doesn’t just play tennis; she moves culture. She can sell shoes, inspire young players, and drive engagement in a way that traditional advertising never could.

The numbers don’t lie—sponsorships, endorsements, and personal branding now outweigh salary earnings for most of the women on this list. Tennis, skiing, basketball, and even badminton are proving profitable for women in sports.

The Future of Female Sports Earnings

The next decade will be a game-changer for female athletes. As media rights deals grow, as women’s sports leagues expand, and as sponsorships catch up to their male counterparts, expect even bigger numbers at the top of the earnings list.

Will another sport challenge tennis for dominance? Will we see a female athlete break the $50 million mark? One thing is clear—women in sports are no longer just competing.

They’re cashing in, building brands, and proving that the business of greatness has no gender.

Related: The 15 Highest Paid Female Athletes

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