Pat McAfee Reportedly Could Earn $60 Million per Year From ESPN With Contract Extension

"His existing arrangement includes a licensing agreement for The Pat McAfee Show that pays over $17 million per year — plus separate contracts for College GameDay and other ESPN contributions."

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ESPN and Pat McAfee are reportedly in serious talks on a contract extension. Thenew deal could pay McAfee more than $60 million per year, according to a report by The Athletic.

What We Know: McAfee currently is under contract with ESPN that earns him roughly $30 million annually under a deal with two years remaining. Earlier this month, Front Office Sports reported that McAfee and ESPN had begun contract extension talks. In addition, his existing arrangement includes a licensing agreement for The Pat McAfee Show that pays over $17 million per year — plus separate contracts for College GameDay and other ESPN contributions. The two sides are reportedly negotiating somewhere between $60 and $65 million per year. According to The Athletic, McAfee’s representatives, TKO/WME’s Ari Emanuel and Mark Shapiro, initially proposed $100 million annually.

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What The Data Shows: Pat McAfee Show viewership data (per ESPN Press)

Month / ProgramAverage Audience (Linear & Digital)
April 2026 (Noon–2pm)430,000 (+29% YOY LINEAR ONLY)
March 2026 (Noon–2pm)455,000 (+25%)
February 2026 (Noon–2pm)317,000 (+28%)
January 2026 (Noon–2pm)575,000 (+16% YOY)

What Remains Unclear: No deal is completed. ESPN and McAfee have not commented publicly on the discussions. Also, no timetable remains unknown to come to an agreement. Also, ESPN has not said if an agreement doesn’t get done if that affects McAfee’s role for College GameDay.

What It Means: ESPN is smart to start talking now. Also, for McAfee, the talks should also provide him some basis in understanding how much ESPN values his content. Without a doubt, ESPN has stood by McAfee through on air disputes and elevated him with opportunities no other ESPN talent share.

The timing here matters. Netflix is aggressively pursuing major sports podcasts, landing deals with Barstool and The Ringer properties. The addition of a live video stream of The Breakfast Club means Netflix is entering the daily content race. Moreover, McAfee’s proven ability to attract younger audiences — and drive sports betting customer acquisition — makes him a rare asset. It will be interesting to see if McAfee takes other bidders for his content after being on ESPN in recent years.

If the $100 million annual number proves true, it will be interesting to see if a streaming platform like Netflix could offer that amount with it becoming public.

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