Thank You, Kansas Taxpayers: Why the Chiefs Leaving Could Be Missouri’s Smartest Decision Yet
I say this as a lifelong fan and long-time season ticket holder: thank you, Kansas taxpayers. If the unthinkable happens and the Kansas City Chiefs eventually relocate across state lines, it might not be a loss for Missouri. It might be a financial and political win.
That sounds heretical in a football-crazed region where Sundays revolve around the NFL and Arrowhead roars like nowhere else. But fandom and fiscal responsibility are not always aligned. The uncomfortable truth is that public subsidies for professional sports franchises often demand far more from taxpayers than they ever give back.
For years, debates about stadium upgrades and incentives have put the states of Missouri and Kansas in a quiet but high-stakes bidding war. Each proposal is wrapped in promises of economic growth, job creation, and civic pride. Yet time and again, independent analyses show the same result: the projected windfalls rarely materialize in the way politicians and team owners suggest.
If Kansas wants to open its treasury to lure the Chiefs, that is Kansas’s prerogative. But Missouri taxpayers should not be guilted into matching every offer out of fear. The idea that a beloved franchise must be preserved at any cost is emotionally compelling—but economically questionable.
Let’s be clear: the Chiefs are more than a team. They are an identity marker for the region, a unifying symbol that transcends political lines. Fans from both states proudly claim them. But emotional ownership is not the same as financial obligation. Missouri’s responsibility is first and foremost to its residents, its schools, its infrastructure, and its long-term fiscal health.
Consider the broader reality of the NFL business model. Franchise values soar, television revenues grow, and team owners accumulate extraordinary wealth regardless of which side of a state border the stadium sits on. Meanwhile, the public is asked to fund renovations, tax abatements, and infrastructure improvements that primarily benefit a private enterprise. That imbalance deserves scrutiny, not blind loyalty.
Even the sacred grounds of Arrowhead Stadium—one of the most iconic venues in sports—cannot be immune to this debate. Tradition is powerful, but tradition should not be used as leverage against taxpayers. Nostalgia is not a budget strategy.
If the Chiefs cross into Kansas, fans will still watch. Jerseys will still sell. Rivalries will still burn. Geography does not erase decades of shared culture overnight. The brand “Kansas City” spans both sides of the state line anyway, anchored by the metropolitan identity of Kansas City. The team’s emotional footprint will not vanish simply because its stadium address changes.
More importantly, Missouri would gain something invaluable: leverage and clarity. Saying “no” to escalating subsidy demands sends a message that the state values disciplined governance over political theater. It also resets expectations for future negotiations—not just with the Chiefs, but with any corporation seeking public incentives.
Critics will argue that losing the team would damage tourism and local business. Some impact is inevitable, but it is often overstated. Sports-driven economic boosts tend to be seasonal and localized, while public funding commitments stretch for decades. When weighed honestly, the long-term fiscal exposure can outweigh the short-term excitement of packed stadium weekends.

And let’s not ignore the political dimension. Standing firm against an expensive subsidy deal can be framed not as abandoning the team, but as protecting the people who ultimately pay the bill: working families, small business owners, and retirees who may never attend a game but would still shoulder the cost.
This is not about being anti-Chiefs. It is about being pro-taxpayer.
I will always cheer for the team, wherever it plays. Loyalty to a franchise does not require unconditional approval of every financial demand tied to it. In fact, true loyalty to the region may mean acknowledging that civic pride should not be funded on an open-ended public credit card.
So yes, thank you, Kansas taxpayers—if you truly want to foot the bill. Missouri can still love the Chiefs, still fill living rooms with red and gold every Sunday, and still celebrate championships. But it can also demonstrate that passion does not have to come at the expense of fiscal common sense.
In the end, the real question is not whether the Chiefs belong to Missouri or Kansas. It is whether any sports franchise should ever be powerful enough to make taxpayers feel like they have no choice but to pay—or risk losing a piece of their identity.