Oleksandr Usyk Net Worth in 2026: Career Earnings, Titles, and Record
Oleksandr Usyk has moved from cruiserweight standout to undisputed heavyweight champion. His record stays clean—25 wins, zero losses—but the money side of his career draws more questions than clear answers. Public estimates of his net worth vary. Fight purses get reported, but rarely confirmed. This profile sticks to what can be checked: fight results, title history, and earnings figures that have appeared in boxing and sports-business coverage.
Quick snapshot
- Record: 25-0 (16 KOs) as of May 2026.
- Born: January 17, 1987, Simferopol, Crimea
- Stance/Size: Southpaw, 6’3″, 78″ reach
- Pro debut: November 9, 2013
- Current titles: WBC, WBO, WBA (Super), IBO heavyweight; Ring magazine.
- Disclosed career earnings: ~$52.8 million (Tapology reported figure).
- Net worth estimates: Range from ~$4M pre-Joshua to $60-65M in recent Marca reporting; other outlets cite higher or lower.
Career timeline: verified results
Usyk turned pro in late 2013 after winning Olympic gold at heavyweight in 2012. He stayed at cruiserweight through 2018, collecting all four major belts. The move up came in 2019.
- 2013-2018 (Cruiserweight): 15-0, unified WBC, WBA, IBF, WBO titles by beating Murat Gassiev (UD, July 2018).
- Oct 2019: Heavyweight debut, TKO7 vs. Chazz Witherspoon
- Oct 2020: UD win over Derek Chisora (WBO Inter-Continental title)
- Sep 2021: UD win vs. Anthony Joshua—wins WBA, IBF, WBO, IBO heavyweight titles
- Aug 2022: Split decision win vs. Joshua in rematch, retains belts
- Aug 2023: TKO9 vs. Daniel Dubois, retains titles
- May 2024: Split decision win vs. Tyson Fury—becomes first undisputed heavyweight champion in four-belt era
- Dec 2024: Unanimous decision win vs. Fury in rematch
- Jul 2025: TKO5 vs. Dubois in rematch, retains undisputed status
- May 2026: TKO11 vs. Rico Verhoeven, retains WBC and Ring titles.
He has never lost a professional fight. The split decision against Fury in May 2024 was close on two cards; the rematch went more clearly. Usyk has worked with trainers, including James Ali Bashir and Anatoly Lomachenko, at various points.

Style notes: what shows up on tape
Usyk’s footwork stays active. He circles left off the jab, then resets before throwing. That reset matters; he doesn’t fire and drift. He uses the jab to move opponents back, not just to score. Even light jabs tend to make heavyweights step away.
At cruiserweight, he handled pressure by angling out. At heavyweight, he does the same but with more caution. His combinations are short. He rarely chases. When opponents press, he pivots or clinches to slow the pace.
He looks comfortable at mid-range. Inside exchanges happen, but he doesn’t linger there. His body shots are tucked in—short hooks, not wide swings. Late in fights, his output can drop, but his movement usually stays. That has been true across both weight classes.
Strengths & weaknesses (observable)
Strengths
- Jab control: He uses it to set distance, not just to score points
- Foot reset timing: Steps set before exchanges, not after, helps balance
- Pace management: Slows fights down when needed, especially at heavyweight
- Angle creation: Circles off the lead foot to avoid straight counters
- Calm under pressure: Doesn’t rush when hurt or pushed back
Areas opponents have targeted
- Body work: When opponents commit to the torso, Usyk’s output can dip
- Inside pressure: Heavyweights who get in close and hold ground can make him work harder
- Late-round output: Punch numbers sometimes fall in rounds 9-12
- Size disadvantage: He gives up reach and weight to most heavyweights
These aren’t flaws that lose fights. They’re patterns opponents have tried to use. Most haven’t found enough success to change outcomes.
Fight statistics (selected heavyweight bouts)
| Date | Opponent | Result | Method | Titles at stake |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 2021 | Anthony Joshua | W | UD (12) | WBA, IBF, WBO, IBO |
| Aug 2022 | Anthony Joshua | W | SD (12) | WBA, IBF, WBO, IBO |
| Aug 2023 | Daniel Dubois | W | TKO9 | WBA, IBF, WBO, IBO |
| May 2024 | Tyson Fury | W | SD (12) | WBC, WBA, IBF, WBO, Ring |
| Dec 2024 | Tyson Fury | W | UD (12) | WBC, WBA, WBO, Ring |
| Jul 2025 | Daniel Dubois | W | TKO5 | Undisputed (all four) |
| May 2026 | Rico Verhoeven | W | TKO11 | WBC, Ring |
Source: BoxRec and Tapology bout records. Methods and title designations were verified against official sanctioning body announcements where available.
Career turning points
World Boxing Super Series final (July 2018)
Beating Murat Gassiev unified the cruiserweight division. It proved Usyk could handle elite pressure and high-stakes fights. The performance raised his profile globally.
First Joshua fight (Sep 2021)
Moving up to heavyweight and winning three belts in one night changed his earning power. It also answered questions about whether his style would work against bigger men.
Fury fight (May 2024)
Becoming the undisputed heavyweight champion put him in rare company. The split decision showed the fight was competitive, but the result cemented his standing.
Rematch cycle (2024-2025)
Winning both Fury and Dubois rematches showed he could adjust. The Fury rematch went clearer on the cards; the Dubois rematch ended earlier. Both suggested he learned from the first meetings.
Financial overview (carefully sourced)
Boxing purses are rarely fully disclosed. What follows are figures that have appeared in sports-business reporting. None are confirmed by Usyk’s representatives.
| Fight | Reported purse (Usyk) | Source notes |
|---|---|---|
| vs. Anthony Joshua (2021) | ~$11.3M base | SalaryLeaks reported figure; PPV share not confirmed. |
| vs. Anthony Joshua (2022) | ~$42M base | SalaryLeaks: total earnings likely higher with bonuses. |
| vs. Daniel Dubois (2023) | ~$6M base | Tapology disclosed pay; backend not public. |
| vs. Tyson Fury (May 2024) | ~$46M base | Tapology disclosed; total purse reported ~$150M, split ~70/30 Fury/Usyk in some outlets. |
| vs. Tyson Fury (Dec 2024) | Est. $76-114M range | Conflicting reports: some outlets cited $76M for Usyk, others $114M; no official confirmation. |
| vs. Daniel Dubois (Jul 2025) | Est. $132M | Marca reported total purse ~$200-203M with ~65% to Usyk. |
Net worth estimates
Public estimates vary widely. Marca placed Usyk’s net worth between £45-48 million ($60-65 million) as of mid-2025. Other outlets have cited lower figures (~$4 million pre-Joshua) or higher totals (up to $214 million in some 2025 reports). Tapology lists career disclosed earnings at $52.8 million, which counts only purses made public. Sponsorships, Ukrainian business ventures, and appearance fees are rarely detailed in filings.
Key point: No single number should be treated as final. Boxing earnings depend on PPV splits, bonuses, and private deals. Usyk’s team has not released a full financial breakdown.
FAQ
Is Oleksandr Usyk still undefeated?
Yes. His professional record is 25-0 (16 KOs) as of May 2026.
Which titles does Usyk hold right now?
As of mid-2026, he holds the WBC, WBO, WBA (Super), and IBO heavyweight titles, plus the Ring magazine belt. He vacated the IBF title in June 2024 but regained undisputed status after the July 2025 Dubois rematch.
What is Usyk’s net worth in 2026?
Estimates range from ~$60-65 million (Marca) to higher figures in other outlets. These are not verified by Usyk’s camp. Disclosed career earnings sit around $52.8 million per Tapology.
Did Usyk really earn over $100 million for one fight?
Some reports after the December 2024 Fury rematch cited figures in that range for Usyk, but numbers varied by outlet and were not officially confirmed. Treat any single number as an estimate.
Who trains Usyk?
He has worked with multiple coaches over his career, including James Ali Bashir and Anatoly Lomachenko. His current setup has not been formally detailed in recent fight camps.
Will Usyk fight Tyson Fury again?
As of mid-2026, no third fight has been officially announced. Both fighters have mandatory obligations and other options. Any matchup would require new negotiations.
Author
Final thoughts
Usyk never relied on heavyweight size the way most champions do. He kept moving, kept jabbing, kept resetting. Even after the division change, the feet stayed active. Late in fights, he usually looked calmer than his opponents pressing forward. That pattern has held from cruiserweight through the heavyweight title runs. The money numbers will keep shifting. The tape doesn’t lie.

