Tyson “The Gypsy King” Fury is one of the highest-earning heavyweight boxers of his generation. A lineal heavyweight champion known for his charisma and an against-the-odds comeback story, Fury has built his fortune on a series of blockbuster pay-per-view fights. As of mid-2026, the strongest current sources cluster around a net worth of $200 million.
Tyson Fury Net Worth: What the Sources Say
- $200 million — Celebrity Net Worth (updated May 2026)
- £162 million (~$200M) — Sunday Times Rich List 2026, where Fury debuted as the 9th-richest British sports star (May 2026)
- $146 million earned in 2025 alone — Forbes, which ranked him the world’s No. 3 highest-paid athlete of 2025 (earnings, not net worth)
- Our take: estimates across outlets span $140–250 million; we anchor on ~$200 million per the two strongest 2026 sources. See our methodology.
Overview
Early Life & Rise
Born August 12, 1988, in Manchester, England, into a Traveller family, Fury turned professional in 2008. In 2015 he shocked the boxing world by defeating long-reigning champion Wladimir Klitschko to claim the unified heavyweight titles.
Comeback & Career Earnings
After a well-documented battle with mental health and a hiatus from the sport, Fury returned and rebuilt his career around the trilogy with Deontay Wilder (2018–2021) — Wilder III alone carried a $30 million guarantee plus a 60% pay-per-view share. The 2023 Riyadh crossover against Francis Ngannou reportedly paid up to $50 million more.
The Usyk Fights, Retirement and Comeback
Fury lost both 2024 undisputed-title fights against Oleksandr Usyk, but they were the biggest paydays of his career: reported purses of roughly £81 million for the first bout and £67 million for the December rematch. He announced his retirement in January 2025 — then returned on April 11, 2026, beating Arslanbek Makhmudov in front of ~60,000 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (ESPN). A long-awaited Anthony Joshua fight is signed for late 2026, with a charity bout against Mariusz Wach in Thailand set for July 2026 first.
How Tyson Fury Built His Fortune
Fury’s fortune rests almost entirely on heavyweight pay-per-view economics. After upsetting Wladimir Klitschko in 2015 and then overcoming a well-documented hiatus, he rebuilt his career around the Wilder trilogy — a run of blockbuster events that re-established him as a transatlantic star. The Saudi-backed era that followed (Ngannou, then the two Usyk fights) delivered the largest single paydays of his career, and Forbes put his 2025 earnings alone at $146 million.
Brand & Media
Beyond the ring, Fury has broadened his brand through two seasons of the Netflix reality series At Home with the Furys (the deal’s value has never been made public), a bestselling autobiography, his Furocity energy-drink brand and a range of endorsements. Now based on the Isle of Man, he made his Sunday Times Rich List debut in 2026. His charisma and comeback narrative — including his openness about mental health — have made him one of British sport’s most marketable figures.
Sources
- Celebrity Net Worth — Tyson Fury Net Worth (May 2026)
- Isle of Man Today — Fury makes Sunday Times Rich List debut (May 2026)
- Forbes — Tyson Fury profile / World’s Highest-Paid Athletes 2025
- SportBible — Usyk fight earnings breakdown (December 2024)
- ESPN — Fury to fight Wach, Joshua bout to follow (June 2026)
Related Net Worth Profiles
Explore more Sports figures with comparable career earnings and wealth:
- Deontay Wilder Net Worth — $35 million
- Conor McGregor Net Worth — $200 million
- Floyd Mayweather Net Worth — estimates range $50–400 million
- Manny Pacquiao Net Worth — $220 million
Browse our full boxing & MMA net worth rankings for more profiles and career-earnings breakdowns.
Estimated Income Breakdown
How the fortune is built. Figures are independent editorial estimates aggregated from the public record.
| Income source | Estimated lifetime value |
|---|---|
| Sports contracts + prize | $30.0M |
| Endorsements + brand deals | $3.0M |
| Business ventures + equity | $2.0M |
| Estimated total | $35.0M |
As of 2026. Driven by heavyweight purses + PPV shares — the Deontay Wilder trilogy, the 2024 Oleksandr Usyk fights + the Netflix series At Home with the Furys; annual figure varies sharply with fight schedule. Methodology · Corrections.
Known Career Earnings
Documented project-by-project earnings for Tyson Fury, sorted by year. Figures are editorial estimates compiled from reported salaries, backend deals and public disclosures. Where only a salary is known, the entry reflects the upfront fee; backend, residuals and bonus payments are separated where reported.
| Year | Project | Type | Note | Reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Pro debut + British titles | sports | Turned pro in 2008 + climbed the domestic + European heavyweight ranks | $200K |
| 2015 | Beats Wladimir Klitschko | sports | Upset Klitschko to win the unified heavyweight titles — his breakthrough | $5.0M |
| 2018 | Comeback fights | sports | Returned after a hiatus; the first Deontay Wilder fight (a draw) became a major PPV | $10.0M |
| 2020 | Wilder II (title win) | sports | Stopped Wilder to win the WBC heavyweight title — a career-defining, high-purse night | $25.0M |
| 2021 | Wilder III | sports | The trilogy finale (a classic) delivered another reported eight-figure purse | $30.0M |
| 2022 | Whyte + title defenses | sports | The Dillian Whyte defense at Wembley (~94,000 fans) was a huge gate + PPV | $30.0M |
| 2023 | Netflix + endorsements | business | At Home with the Furys (Netflix), autobiography + endorsements | $5.0M |
| 2023 | Ngannou crossover | sports | The Francis Ngannou crossover bout in Saudi Arabia reportedly delivered his largest single purse | $50.0M |
| 2024 | Usyk I & II | sports | Two undisputed-title fights vs. Oleksandr Usyk in Saudi Arabia — massive purses | $60.0M |
| 2025 | Boxing + brand | business | Annualized income — fights, media + brand/endorsement portfolio | $20.0M |
| 2026 | Brand + media | business | Annualized combined income — boxing purses, Netflix/media + endorsements | $20.0M |
| 2026 | Fights + ventures | business | Annualized income — heavyweight bouts + media/brand ventures (highly variable) | $20.0M |
Reported figures only — projects without public salary disclosure are omitted. See our Methodology for sources and our Corrections Policy if you can document a different figure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Short answers to the most common questions about this profile. For our sourcing and update method, see our Methodology page.
What is Tyson Fury's net worth in 2026?
Our editorial estimate places Tyson Fury's 2026 net worth at around $165 million, built on heavyweight purses + pay-per-view shares — notably the Deontay Wilder trilogy and the 2024 fights against Oleksandr Usyk — plus a Netflix series and endorsements.
How much does Tyson Fury earn per fight?
At his peak, Tyson Fury has reportedly earned tens of millions of dollars per fight in purses + pay-per-view shares; his biggest nights — the Wilder trilogy and the Usyk fights — were among the most lucrative of his career.
Did Tyson Fury beat Wladimir Klitschko?
Yes. In 2015 Tyson Fury defeated long-reigning champion Wladimir Klitschko to claim the unified world heavyweight titles — the breakthrough win of his career.
Does Tyson Fury have a Netflix show?
Yes. Tyson Fury stars in the Netflix reality series At Home with the Furys, which follows his family life and has broadened his brand beyond boxing.
How old is Tyson Fury?
Tyson Fury was born on August 12, 1988, in Manchester, England, making him 37 years old in 2026.
Who is richer than Tyson Fury?
A side-by-side comparison with other sports profiles where reported estimates are available.





