We can usually find estimates ranging from $125-160m as Tyson Fury’s 2026 net worth. It’s not quite an exact figure but that range generally reflects published reports, fight income to date, and filings related to his businesses in the UK.
Born Wythenshawe, Manchester in 1988, Tyson Fury comes from a fighting dynasty. Having won an ABA amateur heavyweight title before turning professional in 2008 he’s at a heavyweight size at 6ft 9in, though his style has never been typical; moving well for his size, he was and still is a great exponent of feints, leaning, wrestling, showboating and making opponents work to his rhythm.
His first huge career moment was when he beat Wladimir Klitschko to become a unified heavyweight champion in Germany in 2015. Reports claimed Fury was guaranteed $5m from the fight (though perhaps more in reality due to other revenue streams) and the victory made him a global star, but his largest ever earnings came after his comeback.
The Deontay Wilder trilogy took Fury to a new level of financial reward. Although their first contest in 2018 was a draw, the second and third bouts (in 2020 and 2021) made him a genuine pay-per-view star and according to reports at the time he banked $20-25m from both contests.
By 2022, Fury was selling out stadiums, and he came up against Dillian Whyte at Wembley in a bout following a purse bid of over $30m, with Fury picking up the larger champion’s share. He stopped Whyte in the sixth, and at that point indicated retirement but there’s never been reason to take Tyson Fury’s retirement seriously.
The Saudi fights in 2023 and 2024 significantly increased his earning capacity, with his crossover fight against Francis Ngannou in 2023 thought to have netted him more than $40m. Despite losing both contests against Oleksandr Usyk in 2024, the bouts generated massive income and his earnings were predicted by Forbes to be around $115m for 2025 from boxing alone.
Fury has generated further income from books, merchandise, sponsorships, public appearances, Netflix’s At Home With the Furys documentary series and his Furocity drinks range, but the vast bulk of his fortune is still derived from the same source: heavyweight boxing, pay-per-view, Saudi payments and the ability to sell the fight long before the bell rings.
Checked against: Forbes estimated Fury’s 2025 income as $146m, Celebrity Net Worth list his net worth as $160m and shareholder funds for Tyson Fury Ltd have been linked to over £161.92m by UK company reports.