The octagon, the lights, and the cacophony come to mind when people think of the UFC. Federal courtrooms in Nevada are not typically on their minds. However, the biggest mixed martial arts organization in the world has been engaged in a different kind of competition for over ten years, one in which the judges don robes and the damage isn’t measured in broken bones.
December 2014 saw the filing of the case that would eventually become Cung Le, et al. v. Zuffa, LLC. A number of current and former fighters, including fighters like Jon Fitch, Nathan Quarry, and Cung Le, asserted that the UFC had suppressed fighters’ earning potential and limited their ability to bargain with rival promotions by using its dominant market position. As is typical in antitrust litigation, the case progressed slowly, but it never truly ended.
The UFC reached a settlement of about $375 million by October of the following year. It was a big compromise for a company that has been the undisputed leader of professional mixed martial arts. Legally speaking, it’s rarely an admission of wrongdoing, but it’s still important.

When the payout figures eventually appeared, they were startling. About 35 fighters are anticipated to earn more than $1 million apiece, according to the law firm Berger Montague. $500,000 would be cleared by almost 100. More than 500 would take home more than $100,000. These aren’t numbers for charities. The difference between what these athletes were paid and what similar athletes in boxing or major American sports leagues typically receive represents years of lost earnings.
It’s worth taking a moment to sit with that gap. The lawsuit’s central comparison was that fighters in the NBA, NFL, and boxing have traditionally received about 50% of event proceeds. The plaintiffs claimed that UFC fighters were getting closer to 20%. The attorneys contended that figure would have been significantly higher in the absence of the UFC’s purported anticompetitive actions. It’s difficult to look at that discrepancy and not suspect something.
However, the initial settlement did not end the lawsuit. Johnson v. Zuffa, a second case that covered fighters from 2017 to the present, continued where the first case left off. A protracted legal battle over the UFC’s business practices, including the contracts it demands fighters sign, is now possible. The UFC and WWE merged in 2023 to form the TKO Group.
A different, stranger chapter is also developing. A federal lawsuit was filed in June 2026 to stop a UFC fight card that was scheduled to take place on the White House South Lawn in honor of President Trump’s 80th birthday. The plaintiffs referred to the incident as “deeply corrupt.” The Justice Department retaliated, claiming that the lawsuit was filed too late to warrant postponing an event that had been planned for months. Regardless of one’s opinion of the politics, it’s an amazing sight: construction workers erecting a battlefield outside the White House while attorneys argued in court a short distance away.
When considered collectively, all of this adds up to something worth considering. The UFC has developed a remarkable business. The pay-per-view figures, the production quality, and the worldwide reach are all truly remarkable. However, some of that success may have come at a quantifiable cost to the very athletes who made it all possible, according to the legal record. The fighters who are appearing in court are not seeking pity. They are searching for math that adds up. And it eventually does for many of them.

