Anna Leigh Waters is the highest-paid professional pickleball player in 2026, earning approximately $6.6 million gross ($4 million take-home after taxes) — more than any tennis player on the WTA Tour outside the top 5. Ben Johns, the top-ranked men’s player, earns approximately $4.8 million gross ($3 million take-home).
Both top players make about $1.5 million each from their UPA (United Pickleball Association) league contracts, with the rest coming from massive equipment sponsorships like Waters’ $10 million Franklin paddle deal.
Below the top two, A-tier pros average $750,000 per year, B-tier around $250,000, C-tier around $30,000, and D-tier players (unsigned) often lose money playing the sport professionally. Here’s the complete 2026 breakdown of pro pickleball earnings by tier, sponsorship deals, and prize money.
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How the UPA league pays players
The United Pickleball Association (UPA) was formed in 2023 when the PPA Tour and Major League Pickleball (MLP) merged after a 10-day bidding war that drove player salaries up 300-400%. The UPA now distributes approximately $33 million per year across roughly 130 contracted players. League contracts are tiered: the two faces of the sport (Waters and Johns) each pull around $1.5 million from the league alone.
The next 20 most-marketable players (10 men, 10 women) average $750,000. The next 50 players average $250,000. The bottom 80 average just $30,000. Players who aren’t signed get nothing from the league — they survive on tournament prize money and clinic teaching. The 2023 bidding war effectively reset the entire economic structure of pro pickleball, turning a hobby-tier sport into a real professional career path within 24 months.
Sponsorships are where the real money is
For S-tier players like Waters and Johns, league contracts are only one slice of the income pie. Anna Leigh Waters’ January 2026 Franklin paddle deal is worth over $10 million across three years (~$3.3 million annually) and centers on her signature Franklin Aurelius paddle. Ben Johns has a JOOLA lifetime contract worth approximately $1 million annual base plus another $500,000+ in royalties on JOOLA Perseus paddle sales.
Both top players also command $50,000 per appearance for private corporate events like the Pickleball Slam, targeting roughly six premium events per year. A-tier players earn signature equipment deals worth $100,000-$300,000 annually with secondary apparel and footwear sponsorships layered on top. The endorsement gap between S-tier and everyone else is wider than the league contract gap — the top two earn signature paddle royalties that mid-tier players simply can’t access.
Why tournament prize money is the smallest piece
Despite being the most visible part of pro pickleball, prize money is actually the smallest income source for nearly every player. PPA singles winners take home about $1,335 per event — far less than the league contract or sponsorship streams. The career prize money leader as of May 2026 is Anna Leigh Waters at $7.15 million across 147 events on PPA and MLP combined — an impressive total only because of her volume, not per-event payouts.
For B and C-tier players, prize money rarely covers travel, hotel, and coaching costs for the tournament. Many touring pros operate at a net loss on tournament weekends and rely entirely on clinic teaching ($1,500-$3,000 per day at A/B tier, lower at C-tier) and merchandise to make pickleball a viable career. The headline tournament wins create the marketability that drives sponsorship and league contracts — but they’re rarely the income source themselves.
The bigger picture: pickleball is now a real career
In 2021, Ben Johns earned approximately $250,000 from pickleball. In 2024, CNBC reported his earnings at $2.5 million. In 2026, his total income approaches $4.8 million. That’s a roughly 19x increase in five years — a growth rate matched by virtually no other professional sport in modern history.
The sport’s underlying engine is participation: USA Pickleball reports 19.8 million American players in 2024 (up from 13.6M in 2023), making pickleball the fastest-growing sport in the US for four straight years. Equipment manufacturers like JOOLA, Franklin, Selkirk, and Paddletek now compete aggressively for player signatures because pickleball paddle sales are a billion-dollar consumer category. The professional pickleball economy in 2026 has finally caught up with the participation boom — and the next bidding war could push S-tier earnings into eight figures by 2028.
— Drew, Legion Report