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Aliyah Boston’s Net Worth Revealed Ahead of Chicago Sky Game
© Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Through the 2025 season, Aliyah Boston has been one of the most dominant figures in the WNBA.

She's posted strong two-way numbers for the Indiana Fever, with season averages of 15.1 points (career-high), 8.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists, 1.0 steals and 1.0 blocks per game while logging 30 minutes a night.

Those totals have included a recent stretch of six consecutive double-doubles that helped earn her Eastern Conference Player of the Week honors for Week 9 on August 5.

When Indiana took the floor against the Chicago Sky on Saturday, however, the latest headlines around Boston were about more than rebounds and double-doubles.

Off the court, Boston has quietly been building a commercial and business resume that rivals the most marketable figures in the league (Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, etc.), reportedly boasting a personal net worth set at around $2 million, according to Essentially Sports.

Net Worth Estimates — What the $2 million Figure Means

Multiple sports lifestyle and pop-culture outlets have recently reported a similar estimated net worth for Boston and those write-ups typically combine:

  • Career WNBA salary to date.
  • Cumulative NIL and endorsement earnings (college + pro).
  • Value of active sponsorships/partnerships.
  • Early business investments.

When Boston was still at South Carolina in 2023, On3 reported an NIL value of roughly $116k. Crocs, Bose, Dick's Sporting Goods and other partnerships were publicly reported while she was a Gamecock.

After the 2023 WNBA Draft, Boston signed a multiyear footwear/apparel deal with adidas. This season, she has appeared in adidas product drops and even debuted a personal logo on an adidas Player Exclusive (PE).

Aliyah Boston's WNBA Salary and Investments

Beyond sponsorship checks, Boston has started to deploy capital and influence as well.

In July 2025 she joined the investor/ownership group for NWSL expansion club Boston Legacy FC, a publicized minority-owner role that shifts the narrative from athlete-as-spokesperson to athlete-as-investor and stakeholder in women’s pro sports infrastructure.

Boston’s WNBA salary, meanwhile, sits squarely inside the league’s rookie-scale structure. Spotrac lists her rookie deal as a three-year contract worth about $233,468 (an average of roughly $77,823 per year).

WNBA base pay is still modest relative to other pro sports, but endorsements, NIL, product exclusives and early equity investments are where the economic upside accrues.

Regardless, at just 23 years old, Boston already has a booming business portfolio and a flourishing on-court resume, two things that position her to be one of the WNBA's most prominent figures for years to come.

This article first appeared on Athlon Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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