$50 Million
Who He Is
Khabib Abdulmanapovich Nurmagomedov, born September 20, 1988, in Sildi, Dagestan, Russia, is the only fighter in UFC history to retire undefeated as lightweight champion and is widely regarded as the greatest mixed martial artist of all time by pound-for-pound metrics. He was raised by his father Abdulmanap, a military veteran and combat sports coach who built a training environment around wrestling, sambo, and judo in the mountains of Dagestan. Khabib compiled a perfect 29-0 professional record, won the UFC Lightweight Championship in April 2018, and defended it three times against Al Iaquinta, Conor McGregor, Dustin Poirier, and Justin Gaethje before retiring in October 2020 following the death of his father. He was ranked the world’s number one pound-for-pound fighter at the time of his retirement.
His financial story is one of the starkest mismatches between commercial value and compensation in combat sports history. The McGregor fight generated $86.4M in PPV revenue alone and attracted 2.4 million buys – the most commercially successful UFC event of all time at that point – yet Khabib’s disclosed purse was $2M. UFC’s model of classifying fighters as independent contractors and paying them roughly 15-18% of total revenue systematically compressed the earnings of even its biggest stars. Khabib was the biggest star of his era by many metrics and among the lowest-paid relative to the value he generated.
Since retirement he has built Eagle FC, a Russian MMA promotion he acquired for $1M in November 2020 by purchasing Gorilla Fighting Championship and rebranding it. He holds UAE citizenship in addition to his Russian nationality and splits time between Dagestan and the UAE. He has expanded into gym franchises, brand partnerships, and a MultiBank Group digital ecosystem joint venture announced in October 2025.
1. UFC Fight Purses (2012-2020)
The UFC discloses fighter compensation to state athletic commissions, producing a confirmed record. Khabib’s total disclosed UFC fight earnings are $21,720,200 across all 13 UFC appearances, confirmed by multiple tracking sources. His biggest disclosed single-fight payday was $6,877,500 for the Justin Gaethje retirement fight at UFC 254 in October 2020.
Disclosed figures are the floor, not the ceiling. UFC champions at Khabib’s level receive PPV participation points that are not disclosed to state commissions. The McGregor fight at UFC 229 generated 2.4 million PPV buys and $86.4M in revenue. Khabib’s disclosed purse was $2M. At a PPV point rate of 1-2% of revenue – standard for main event champions at the time – his backend from that fight alone was an additional $865K-$1.73M per point percentage, or roughly $6-10M in estimated total compensation including the base purse and bonuses. The Dustin Poirier and Justin Gaethje title defenses also generated substantial PPV revenue.
Estimated true career fight income including PPV participation and discretionary bonuses not disclosed to commissions: approximately $45M total.
Career fight earnings (true total): ~$45M gross.
2. Pre-UFC Regional Career (2008-2012)
Khabib went 16-0 on the Russian and Ukrainian regional circuit before joining the UFC in 2012. Regional MMA payouts in that market at that time were typically in the range of a few hundred dollars to a few thousand dollars per fight. Total pre-UFC earnings were negligible in the context of his overall wealth.
Pre-UFC earnings: ~$200K gross.
3. Endorsements and Appearance Fees (2012-2025)
Khabib’s endorsement portfolio was constrained by several factors: his Russian base, his refusal to endorse products conflicting with his Islamic faith (he turned down multiple alcohol and gambling brands), and the overall UFC endorsement market being far less developed than boxing or team sports. His major documented partners have included Reebok (the UFC’s exclusive kit partner through 2021, under which all fighters received flat rates rather than individual deals), Toyota, Gorilla Energy Drink, and Crypto.com. Post-retirement he added UAE-based lifestyle and tech brands and the MultiBank Group partnership in 2025.
Forbes Russia named him the most successful Russian athlete in 2020. His social media presence at 35M+ Instagram followers commands meaningful appearance fees. However, his principled refusal of several high-value categories kept his endorsement total well below peers with comparable global profiles.
- UFC career (2012-2020, 9 years): avg $1.5M/yr = $13.5M
- Post-retirement (2021-2025, 5 years): avg $2M/yr = $10M
Career endorsements and appearance fees: ~$23.5M gross.
4. Representation
Khabib was managed by his father Abdulmanap throughout his career, with no external management commission taken. Following Abdulmanap’s death in July 2020, his affairs have been handled by family and close associates. Ali Abdelaziz of Dominance MMA served as his manager for a period but the precise arrangement and fee structure were never publicly disclosed. Given the family management model for most of his career, a blended representation rate of approximately 5% is appropriate – well below the 10-15% standard for externally managed fighters.
Representation (5% blended): -$3.5M. Post-representation gross: ~$65.2M.
5. Tax
Khabib is a Russian tax resident based in Dagestan. Russia applies a flat personal income tax rate of 13% on worldwide income for residents – one of the most favorable tax environments for any high-earning athlete in this database. His US fight purses are subject to Nevada non-resident withholding on fight income, with Russia granting a treaty credit for amounts paid to US authorities. The net blended effective rate after withholding credits and modest business deductions: approximately 18%.
Tax (18% of $65.2M): -$11.7M. Net after representation and tax: ~$53.5M.
6. Lifestyle Burn
Khabib’s lifestyle is one of the most well-documented examples of financial modesty at elite athlete income levels. He has spoken repeatedly in interviews about the importance of humility, has no known collection of luxury vehicles or watches, lives with his family in Dagestan rather than a tax-friendly emirate, and has described his personal spending as deliberately simple. His charitable giving within the Dagestani community is real but not on the scale of Pacquiao’s institutionalized philanthropy.
- Full career and post-retirement (2008-2025, 17 years): avg $500K/yr consumed = $8.5M
Total lifestyle burn: ~$8.5M. Available to accumulate: ~$45M.
7. Real Estate
No significant real estate portfolio has been documented beyond his family home in Dagestan and reported properties in the UAE. Purchase prices and current values have not been publicly disclosed. No gain is counted.
Real estate appreciation gain: $0.
8. Business Assets
Eagle FC: Khabib acquired the Gorilla Fighting Championship for a confirmed $1M in November 2020 and rebranded it as Eagle Fighting Championship. The promotion expanded into the US market with events in Miami in 2022 and signed a streaming deal with Amazon Prime Video for US distribution. In 2024, Eagle FC largely went dormant after Russian tax authorities reportedly froze the promotion’s bank accounts as part of a broader $3.4M tax dispute against Khabib. His team denied the allegations as inaccurate; the amount was subsequently reported as paid in full and the accounts unfrozen. The promotion’s operational status remains limited as of 2026. No arm’s-length funding round or disclosed valuation exists for Eagle FC. Per methodology, it is excluded from the waterfall.
Khabib Gyms and Gameplan: A growing chain of combat sports gyms operating under his brand, expanded under the MultiBank Group joint venture announced in October 2025. No disclosed valuation.
MultiBank Group partnership (October 2025): A joint venture with MultiBank Group, a UAE-based financial institution overseeing $29B in assets, granting MultiBank exclusive rights to develop projects under Khabib’s brand including gyms, Gameplan, and Eagle FC within a digital ecosystem. The structure is a brand licensing and development partnership rather than an equity sale. No stake valuation was disclosed.
All three business interests are real and growing. None have an arm’s-length funding-round valuation that can be anchored to. Per methodology, all are excluded.
Business assets: $0 (no disclosed funding-round valuations).
9. Wealth Management
No specific wealth management arrangement or documented investment returns have been publicly disclosed.
Wealth Management: None reported ($0).
Net Worth Waterfall
| Line Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| UFC career fight earnings (disclosed $21.7M + est. PPV points) | +$45M |
| Pre-UFC regional career earnings | +$0.2M |
| Endorsements and appearance fees (career) | +$23.5M |
| Less: representation (5% blended, family-managed model) | -$3.5M |
| Less: tax (18% effective, Russia flat rate + US withholding credit) | -$11.7M |
| Less: lifestyle burn (17 years, modest Dagestani lifestyle) | -$8.5M |
| Real estate appreciation | $0 |
| Business assets (Eagle FC, gyms, Gameplan – no anchor) | $0 |
| Wealth Management | $0 |
| Total Net Worth | ~$45M -> $50M |
Our calculation: $50 Million.
Why Our Figure Is Higher Than Consensus
Celebrity Net Worth places Khabib at $25M. Our independent build produces $50M. The entire gap is the PPV participation income that CNW’s disclosed-purse-only approach misses. CNW cites $14.7M in total UFC career earnings – the disclosed commission figures. Our figure of $45M in true fight income adds the estimated PPV backend for Khabib’s three highest-profile fights: the McGregor bout (2.4M buys, $86.4M revenue), the Gaethje retirement fight (1.3M buys, substantial revenue), and the Poirier defense. At standard champion-level PPV participation rates, those three events alone add approximately $15-20M beyond the disclosed purses. The tax picture also works strongly in Khabib’s favor: Russia’s 13% flat income tax is the lowest rate in this database for any active high-earner, meaning he retained a far higher proportion of his earnings than a comparable fighter based in the US or UK. The low representation cost under the family management model adds further efficiency. The result is a post-tax accumulation base of approximately $45M from a career that generated $68.7M in gross income – a retention rate that almost no athlete at his level matches.
The Most Underpaid Superstar in Combat Sports
The McGregor fight generated $86.4M in pay-per-view revenue. Khabib’s disclosed purse was $2M. Even accounting for PPV participation points and bonuses, he likely took home $8-10M from the most watched MMA event in history – a fraction of what a comparable boxing champion would have earned for a fight of that commercial scale. Floyd Mayweather earned $250M for a single night against Manny Pacquiao in 2015. Canelo Alvarez earned $100M for a single fight in 2025. Khabib Nurmagomedov retired as the undisputed greatest lightweight of all time with $50M – built not from what the sport paid him but from what Russia’s 13% tax rate and a family-managed career allowed him to keep. He is the clearest example in this database of an athlete whose financial outcome was shaped more by cost efficiency than by the scale of his income. He spent almost nothing, paid almost no tax relative to earnings, and walked away with most of what he made.
