
The Green Bay Packers are exploring new ways to increase revenue, including the possibility of selling naming rights tied to Lambeau Field and other team-controlled properties, as the franchise evaluates how to keep pace financially in an NFL economy dominated by billionaire owners.
Packers president and CEO Ed Policy, speaking with Sports Business Journal, pointed to a looming reality: “We’re soon to be the only stadium without naming rights,” he said, referencing the expected end of Chicago’s Soldier Field as an NFL venue. “That’s not a threshold we’re looking to cross any time soon, but we might be a little more aggressive with some of the other entitlement inventory we just hadn’t taken advantage of in the past, including things like training facility entitlements and the Titletown campus.”
Policy took over last July after longtime team president Mark Murphy retired, and he has framed the revenue discussion as a long-term competitiveness issue rather than a short-term cash grab. The Packers are the league’s only publicly owned, nonprofit franchise, which limits their ability to raise capital the way privately held teams can.
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“If you think about, any other team, they’ve got deep-pocketed owners, most of them are worth significantly more than that, and they could sell less than 10 percent of their team, give up no controlling interest, and raise a heck of a lot more than that,” Policy said.
The Packers have leaned on more traditional levers to grow revenue, including ticket pricing. For the 2026 season, the team raised ticket prices by three to 11 percent, according to the same reporting. Policy said demand is not the issue in Green Bay, but pricing power has been intentionally conservative compared with the rest of the league. “Despite the fact that we are probably a top-three team in terms of demand, we are middle of the pack in terms of price,” he said.
Public financial disclosures still show strong performance. The team’s most recent fiscal year ended with a profit of $83.7 million, as cited in coverage of Policy’s comments. But Policy has emphasized that the point is to avoid a scenario where rising expenses force football decisions to be made through a financial lens. “Finance and economics really don’t play into our football decision-making right now, and it’s my job to ensure that it never does,” he said. “Given the pace that the expenses have accelerated over the past few years, if we find ourselves falling behind, it’s going to be really hard to catch up. So, we have to keep ourselves in a position where we’re not falling behind.”
If the conversation feels jarring in Green Bay, it is partly because the organization has publicly resisted the idea before. In 2015, Murphy said the team had “no interest” in selling naming rights to Lambeau Field, even while acknowledging that companies had approached him about it.
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Policy’s current posture is more about expanding sponsorship inventory that doesn’t touch the Lambeau Field nameplate immediately. That includes potential naming rights or entitlements for the team’s training facilities and the Titletown District, the Packers-owned real estate development next to the stadium that has grown into a year-round destination.
For now, Policy’s comments amount to this: the Packers are not actively shopping the Lambeau Field name, but they are no longer treating all naming-rights discussions as unthinkable, especially as the league’s revenue environment continues to evolve.
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