Even with skateboarding getting more mainstream attention over the last few years, no skateboarder made the list of the 50 highest paid athletes in 2026.
Not even skate legend Tony Hawk came close to the numbers being posted by today’s biggest names in football, basketball, boxing, golf, baseball, and Formula 1.
At the top of the list sits Cristiano Ronaldo with a massive $300 million in earnings. Right behind him is Canelo Álvarez at $170 million, followed by Lionel Messi with $140 million. The rest of the top ten includes stars like LeBron James, Shohei Ohtani, Stephen Curry, Jon Rahm, Karim Benzema, Kevin Durant, and Lewis Hamilton.
Every athlete in the top ten made at least $100 million.
That gap says a lot about where skateboarding still stands financially compared to bigger global competitions.
Skateboarding has huge cultural influence and some of the most recognizable personalities on the planet, but the money flowing through the industry is still much smaller than leagues like the NBA, NFL, MLB, Premier League, or Formula 1.
Even the biggest skateboarders usually depend on several income streams at once. Contest winnings are relatively small compared to other athletic competitions. Sponsorships help, but many skate companies operate on tighter budgets than giant brands connected to football or basketball.
Shoe deals can still be lucrative for top pros, though only a handful reach that level.
Back in the day, Hawk became one of the few skateboarders to build serious wealth outside of contests through video games, merchandise, endorsements, and business deals.
His name became bigger than skateboarding itself for a generation.
But even at his peak, the overall money in skateboarding was never on the same level as the global football machine or the billion dollar TV deals surrounding major American leagues.
Another factor is audience size.
Football stars like Ronaldo and Messi have hundreds of millions of followers across social media and fan bases spread across nearly every country.
That kind of reach attracts giant sponsorship contracts from luxury brands, airlines, sportswear companies, and massive corporations willing to spend huge amounts for visibility.
Skateboarding still has a more niche audience by comparison.
It has loyal fans and global appeal, but it does not yet generate the same television rights money, stadium revenue, or sponsorship scale that traditional leagues bring in every year.
At the same time, skateboarding continues to grow.
The Olympics helped introduce contest skating to new audiences, and younger skaters now have more opportunities than previous generations ever had.
Major brands outside skateboarding are also paying more attention to the culture. Still, based on the 2026 earnings rankings, skateboarders remain far from the financial world occupied by the highest paid athletes on Earth.
Right now, skateboarding continues to be more about passion, creativity, and culture than giant paychecks.
