Justin Gaethje Fed Up: Shares UFC Pay Frustration After White House Title Victory “I deserve to be compensated.”

Justin Gaethje

Justin Gaethje has spent years being the fighter the UFC could drop into chaos and trust the crowd would get its money’s worth. That image has long helped the promotion, but after winning the lightweight title from Ilia Topuria at the White House event, Gaethje is making it clear that highlight reels and fan goodwill are no longer enough for him. He wants a different form of payment now, one tied to the business itself.

Justin Gaethje Sends Strong Message to UFC Over Pay and Long-Term Security

On the back of that title win, Gaethje said he believes he has earned more than another negotiated check. His idea was blunt: “I’m in a place where I feel like I deserve to be compensated for what I have done. The UFC should create a company and give me equity in that company so I can build passive income.” From his appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast, where he framed the request as long-term security rather than a simple demand for more money on the next bout agreement.

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Fighters regularly push for better contracts, pay-per-view points, or bonuses. Gaethje is asking for a stake in a structure that could keep paying him after his active career ends, which is a very different kind of public ask from a sitting champion.

Gaethje did not say this while chasing relevance or trying to negotiate after a loss. He said it after one of the biggest wins of his career, a White House event victory over Topuria that gave him the undisputed lightweight title and added another major chapter to a resume that already included an interim belt and the BMF title. His record of bonus-winning performances has also become part of the case he is making for himself, with reports highlighting his huge bonus haul from the Topuria fight and his long-standing reputation as one of the UFC’s most dependable action names.

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Justin Gaethje, Ilia Topuria
Justin Gaethje Ends Ilia Topuria’s Reign at UFC Freedom 250. [Image via Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC]

The UFC already sits inside a larger corporate structure. Since September 2023, UFC and WWE have operated under TKO Group Holdings, a public company that trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker “TKO,” with Endeavor holding a 51 percent controlling interest and former WWE shareholders holding 49 percent on a fully diluted basis. In other words, Gaethje is asking for equity in an ecosystem that already exists at scale, even if the exact vehicle he described would have to be separately created.

Justin Gaethje

That does not mean the UFC is likely to hand out equity to active fighters as standard practice. Public-company ownership, executive control, and athlete compensation do not usually mix in simple ways, and nothing in the current TKO structure suggests a fighter equity program is in place. Still, Gaethje’s position carries weight because he is not a fringe voice. He is a champion, a proven draw, and one of the few fighters whose style became part of the UFC’s modern identity.

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Justin Gaethje: “If It’s Not the Champion, I Might Just Walk Away” For His Next Fight
Mar 18, 2023; London, UNITED KINGDOM; Justin Gaethje (red gloves) reacts during his fight with Rafael Fiziev (not pictured) during UFC 286 at O2 Arena. Mandatory Credit: Per Haljestam-USA TODAY Sports

Gaethje was viewed as a company man because he fought anyone, delivered violence, and rarely sounded interested in public labor disputes. This latest stance suggests that has changed, or at least evolved. He still sounds loyal to the brand, but loyalty now comes with a price tag tied to ownership, and that is a much bigger conversation than one champion asking for a raise.