UFC 200 Reebok Fighter Payouts: $350k Spent To Sponsor Fighters For Biggest Show Ever

With UFC 200 officially in the books, it’s time to find out how much money fighters who competed on Saturday’s fight card earned via UFC’s mandatory Reebok sponsorship deals.

Below are the payouts that the fighters earned strictly from the UFC/Reebo…

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With UFC 200 officially in the books, it’s time to find out how much money fighters who competed on Saturday’s fight card earned via UFC’s mandatory Reebok sponsorship deals.

Below are the payouts that the fighters earned strictly from the UFC/Reebok outfitting deal for the fights from Las Vegas, Nevada this past Saturday, July 9, 2016. Figures are courtesy of MMAJunkie.com.

Note: These are not the usual fighter salaries we post after each event, but instead the amount of money fighters earned strictly from the new Reebok sponsorship deal.

UFC 200 Main Card (Pay-Per-View)

Amanda Nunes: $30,000 def. Miesha Tate: $40,000
Brock Lesnar: $5,000 def. Mark Hunt: $10,000
Daniel Cormier: $40,000 def. Anderson Silva $15,000
Jose Aldo: $30,000 def. Frankie Edgar: $30,000
Cain Velasquez: $10,000 def. Travis Browne: $10,000

UFC 200 Preliminary Card (FOX Sports 1)

Julianna Pena: $2,500 def. Cat Zingano: $2,500
Kelvin Gastelum: $5,000 def. Johny Hendricks: $15,000
T.J. Dillashaw: $10,000 def. Raphael Assuncao: $5,000
Sage Northcutt: $2,500 def. Enrique Marin: $2,500

UFC 200 Preliminary Card (UFC Fight Pass):

Joe Lauzon: $20,000 def. Diego Sanchez: $20,000
Gegard Mousasi: $10,000 def. Thiago Santos: $5,000
Jim Miller: $20,000 def. Takanori Gomi: $10,000

TOTAL: $350,000

How do Reebok and the UFC decide how much fighters earn through the new Reebok sponsorship deal? How do they reach the figures that will be paid out to the fighters? Click ahead to page two for a full breakdown that explains what it takes to make a certain amount of money through this new, mandatory sponsorship deal between UFC and Reebok.