Kenny Omega Net Worth 2026: AEW Salary, EVP Role, and Career Earnings

By Devendra Kumar

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Kenny Omega

Kenny Omega’s net worth is estimated at $2–5 million as of 2026. His AEW salary is widely reported at $3 million per year, placing him among the promotion’s top earners. His contract runs through at least 2027. Merchandise royalties, gaming ventures, and endorsements add further income on top of that base. Pre-AEW, his net worth sat around $1 million after years of NJPW success.

Tyson Smith, better known as Kenny Omega, went from a cult hero in Japanese wrestling to one of the most decorated performers in AEW history, winning the World, Tag Team, Trios, and International Championships to become the promotion’s first-ever Grand Slam Champion in March 2025. His bank account has grown to match. Here’s the real breakdown.

What Is Kenny Omega’s Net Worth in 2026?

Kenny Omega’s net worth is estimated at $2–5 million as of early 2026. His AEW salary is the primary driver, widely reported at $3 million annually, making him one of the promotion’s top five earners. Pre-AEW estimates sat around $1 million, built from years of NJPW main events and independent bookings. The wide range in estimates exists because wrestling contracts are private and never publicly filed.

The $1 million figure you’ll see on older sites is outdated. That reflected his earnings before AEW’s TV deal, merchandise infrastructure, and executive pay kicked in. Since 2019, his income has grown significantly every year. The Sportster places his current net worth at around $2 million, while other outlets tracking his salary and side income push the estimate closer to $5 million. The truth sits somewhere in between.

Net worth is never a simple math problem. Taxes, spending, and investments all shape the final number.

How Kenny Omega’s Wealth Has Grown Over Time

Omega’s financial story tracks closely with his career milestones. Before AEW existed, he was one of NJPW’s biggest stars but working in a market where even top talent earned far less than their North American counterparts. Pre-AEW estimates put his net worth at roughly $1 million, accumulated across fifteen years of wrestling in Canada, Japan, and the independent circuit.

That changed fast once AEW launched in 2019. A guaranteed $3 million-per-year contract, combined with regular TV exposure on TNT and TBS, transformed his income profile. By 2021, he was simultaneously holding the AEW World, IMPACT World, and AAA Mega Championships, becoming one of the most visible performers in the sport. Sponsorship value and merchandise royalties moved in lockstep.

EraEstimated Net WorthKey Income Driver
Pre-AEW (before 2019)~$1 millionNJPW salary, indie bookings
AEW Year 1–2 (2019–2021)~$2 million$3M AEW contract + PPV bonuses
Peak Championship Run (2021)~$3 millionTriple champion, IMPACT crossover
Injury Period (2023–2024)StableEVP duties continued during absence
Post-Return (2025–2026)$2–5 millionGrand Slam run, contract through 2027

The 2023–2024 period was a setback. A diverticulosis diagnosis required surgery and kept him out of action for an extended stretch. But Omega continued earning his EVP salary during the absence and returned stronger in early 2025, defeating Konosuke Takeshita at Revolution to win the AEW International Championship and becoming the promotion’s first Grand Slam Champion. That title win reinforced his long-term value at AEW and his position among the promotion’s top earners.

For a broader look at how top athletes build wealth across career stages, the pattern is consistent: early underpayment, then a massive leap when stardom meets the right contract.

What Does Kenny Omega Actually Earn at AEW?

Kenny Omega’s AEW salary is reported at $3 million per year. His contract, first signed in 2019 and extended beyond its original term, runs through at least 2027 according to Fightful Select. That makes him one of a handful of AEW wrestlers earning at or above that threshold.

Here’s how Omega’s reported pay stacks up against his closest peers at the promotion:

WrestlerReported Annual SalaryNotes
Jon Moxley$6 millionHighest-paid AEW performer
Chris Jericho~$5 millionIncludes podcast and Fozzy revenue
Kenny Omega$3 millionEVP + in-ring deal combined
Hangman Adam Page$3 million+Long-term AEW original

Beyond the base salary, PPV bonuses are reported to add 5–6% of show profits for top performers on strong-selling events. In a year with multiple successful AEW pay-per-views, that adds a meaningful sum on top of the guaranteed $3 million.

For context on how combat sports earnings at the elite level are structured, the AEW model is notable: it offers guaranteed base salaries with bonus upside, unlike the UFC’s more variable pay structure.

Does the EVP Title Actually Pay More, Or Is It Just a Label?

The EVP role is real, but it has changed significantly since 2019. Omega’s creative control was pulled back as AEW president Tony Khan took centralized ownership of booking decisions. Reports from Bodyslam confirmed that creative became entirely Tony Khan’s domain within the first couple of years, with EVPs reduced to area-specific roles rather than full creative partners.

But Omega’s area-specific role has been genuinely substantial. He was deeply involved in developing AEW: Fight Forever, the promotion’s first console video game, using his well-known passion for gaming to shape the product. He also continued contributing to women’s division match production and remained involved in talent communications. When he was sidelined with injuries in 2022, Fightful reported he kept performing EVP duties and was praised internally for the effort.

The myth is that EVPs are secretly earning a second executive salary on top of wrestling pay. The reality is that the $3 million figure likely covers both roles combined. The value of the EVP title is in equity, influence, and leverage at contract time, not a separate line item on a pay stub. For a comparison of how executive and coaching salaries are structured in other sports, the dual-role model is not unique to wrestling.

Where Else Does Kenny Omega Make Money?

Omega’s income doesn’t start and stop with his AEW contract. Several additional streams contribute to his overall net worth:

Merchandise: AEW sells Omega’s gear through its official store, with performers earning royalties on branded items. His Elite stable affiliation keeps his merchandise in regular rotation at live events and online.

Gaming and endorsements: Omega is a Redcon supplement brand elite athlete, appeared in the BanG Dream! Girls Band Party mobile game promotion in 2018, and was a guest at gaming festivals including Gamestar Asia. His involvement in the AEW: Fight Forever game development also carried financial upside beyond a standard licensing deal.

PPV bonuses: On a successful pay-per-view event, top performers reportedly earn 5–6% of the show’s profit, not just their base appearance fee.

Lifestyle signals: Omega’s reported car collection is valued at roughly $266,000. That’s a solid asset base, but it reflects comfortable rather than extravagant wealth, especially compared to WWE’s top stars.

Income SourceEstimated Contribution
AEW base salary$3 million/year
PPV bonusesVariable (up to 5–6% per show)
Merchandise royaltiesUndisclosed
Gaming/endorsementsUndisclosed
Car collection (asset)~$266,000

To see how entertainment industry salaries compare for performers who combine in-ring or on-stage work with executive responsibilities, the dual-income model is increasingly common.

How Does Kenny Omega Compare to WWE’s Highest-Paid Stars?

Omega earns well for AEW. He earns less than WWE’s upper tier. Roman Reigns is widely reported at $5–12 million annually, with merchandise and promotional value pushing his total compensation even higher. CM Punk returned to WWE at figures that reportedly exceeded Omega’s current AEW rate. John Cena, even in reduced in-ring activity, generates wealth through acting contracts that dwarf most active wrestlers’ salaries.

Final Word

Kenny Omega’s net worth sits at $2–5 million in 2026. That number is honest: it’s well above what most wrestlers ever earn, and well below the top tier of WWE’s biggest names. His $3 million AEW salary is real, his contract through 2027 is confirmed, and his EVP role, while diminished from its 2019 scope, still adds genuine operational value. His return from a serious illness to win the AEW Grand Slam Championship in 2025 only strengthened his position at the company.

Want to keep tracking what your favorite athletes and performers are actually worth? Read more celebrity and athlete net worth breakdowns at MVP Net Worth, updated as contracts are signed and careers evolve.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Kenny Omega earn per year in AEW?

Omega’s AEW salary is widely reported at $3 million annually. His contract runs through at least 2027 per Fightful Select’s contract tracker.

How does Kenny Omega’s salary compare to Jon Moxley and Chris Jericho?

Omega’s reported $3 million annually sits below Moxley’s reported $6 million and Jericho’s estimated $5 million. 

Is Kenny Omega’s EVP role paid separately from his wrestling contract?

Almost certainly not as a separate salary. Omega’s EVP duties, including his work on the AEW Games division and women’s match production, are folded into his overall deal rather than structured as a distinct executive pay package.

Devendra Kumar

Devendra Kumar is an independent sports journalist who has spent the past 7 years researching and analysing athletes’ earnings, brand endorsements, and investments.

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