The Women’s National Basketball Players Association (WNBPA) has taken the rare step of empowering its leadership to call a strike if necessary, a significant escalation in its tense negotiations with the WNBA over a new collective bargaining agreement.

This dramatic move lays bare how far apart the players and the league remain just weeks before the extended January 9, 2026, deadline to reach a deal.

League stars have voiced mounting frustration with what they see as insufficient progress at the bargaining table.

The union announced that an overwhelming majority of participating players voted to authorize the WNBPA executive committee to call a strike “when necessary.”

Ninety-three percent of eligible players participated in the vote, and 98 percent supported granting that authority.

“The players have spoken,” the WNBPA said in its official statement announcing the vote.

“Through a decisive vote with historic participation, our membership has authorized the WNBPA‘s Executive Committee to call a strike when necessary. The players’ decision is an unavoidable response to the state of negotiations with the WNBA and its teams.”

Although the authorization represents a significant show of unity and leverage for players, the union was careful to clarify that it does not signal an immediate walkout.

“The players’ vote is neither a call for an immediate strike nor an intention to pursue one,” the statement continued. “Rather, it is an emphatic affirmation of the players’ confidence in their leadership and their unwavering solidarity…”

The key issues driving player frustration

At the heart of the dispute are fundamental disagreements over compensation and how revenue is shared across the league.

After years of rapid growth in viewership, attendance, and franchise valuations, underpinned by a historic $2.2 billion media rights deal, players argue the current financial model does not reflect their contribution to that success.

A recent financial analysis noted that WNBA players currently receive a relatively small share of league revenue compared to their NBA counterparts, a key point of contention in negotiations.

The league has proposed significant increases in salaries under a new structure tied to revenue growth, including guarantees of a $1 million base salary and projected average salaries exceeding $530,000 in the early years of the deal.

The league also floated a revenue-sharing model it says would ensure continued salary growth aligned with the WNBA‘s financial trajectory.

But players and their union want a more robust revenue-sharing arrangement that they say ensures a meaningful and predictable share of the money being generated.

The union has pushed for roughly 30 percent of league and team revenue to be allocated to players, far higher than the roughly 15 percent offered by the league in its latest draft terms.

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