The WNBA told the WNBPA and its teams on Monday that a new collective bargaining agreement must be agreed to by March 10 for the 2026 schedule not to be impacted, sources told ESPN.
The WNBA — represented by league staff, the league’s labor relations committee and owners — and over 50 players met virtually Monday morning for the second bargaining session this month involving players, sources told ESPN. In addition to the league sharing the March 10 date, the two sides continued conversing over their conflicting positions amid the now 16-month-long CBA talks.
The WNBPA is planning to meet with leadership to discuss next steps, which include a response to the league’s most recent proposal from Friday.
The league also met with general managers later Monday afternoon to share the March 10 date. It is thought to be the first deadline of sorts the league has provided players and teams as negotiations have dragged on and already disrupted the offseason.

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Even once a deal is agreed upon, it could take weeks to formally ratify. The WNBA still needs to conduct a two-team expansion draft for the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire and hold free agency for 80% of the league.
Training camp is currently slated to begin April 19, with the college draft scheduled for April 13. The regular season is supposed to tip on May 8.
«Often, things tend to get done at the 11th hour,» NBA commissioner Adam Silver said of the WNBA talks at NBA All-Star Weekend on Feb. 14. «We’re getting awfully close to the 11th hour when it comes to bargaining.»
The two sides still do not see eye to eye on how a new revenue sharing system should work, which has been the primary holdup in negotiations. Housing, which has long been provided by teams but was not originally in the league’s proposals, has also been a major flash point.
The WNBA and WNBPA have exchanged proposals throughout the month following a six-week stalemate at the beginning of 2026, during which the league did not respond to a union proposal because it was not considered realistic or effectively different from the PA’s previous one.
The parties extended the past CBA twice before allowing the agreement to expire following a January 9 deadline.
Earlier Monday, the union told ESPN’s Katie Barnes that the WNBA generated enough revenue in 2025 to trigger revenue sharing with its players, and that $9.25 million from licensing revenue will also be divvied out to players. The WNBPA player body authorized the union’s executive committee to call a strike «when necessary» back in December.
«This shows our value and how what we’re fighting for makes sense and how we should keep fighting,» WNBPA treasurer Brianna Turner told Barnes.















