Dana White says the UFC’s long-promised rankings overhaul finally arrives Monday, June 22, and he is already bracing for the MMA internet to start throwing chairs. White has been talking about cleaning up the rankings mess for a while, including when he said he had already spoken with Mark Zuckerberg about the UFC rankings problem, and now the promotion is about to put its new system in front of everyone.
White laid out the timing in a new interview clip posted Sunday after UFC Fight Night Kape vs. Horiguchi. The change follows weeks of teasing from the promotion, which has described the new setup as an objective, data-driven approach built to reward performance instead of popularity or opinion. That sounds clean on paper. In practice, rankings are where fight fans go to argue with spreadsheets, media voters, matchmakers, and sometimes oxygen itself.
Watch White discuss the rankings update below:
“Hopefully, they work,” White said with a laugh. “But, yeah, they come out Monday. We’ll have all the details and everything you need to know about them will hit on Monday.”
White Expects Complaints No Matter What
The old UFC rankings system has been a punching bag for years. Fighters have complained about stale movement, odd jumps, inactive names staying too high, and contenders getting punished for taking riskier fights. White has blasted the current media-voted model before, including when he vowed to fix what he called biased UFC rankings while ranting about the voting process.
This version will apparently keep people involved while adding another layer of calculation. White said he is not handing the whole thing to a machine and walking away.
“I’m gonna have both, I’m still gonna do human, nonhuman, however you wanna look at it, rankings,” White said. “And I think that neither will be perfect, but it’ll get us closer. And the rankings that are gonna come out on Monday, I think, make a lot more sense. You know, I think you’re gonna have a lot of people who are gonna complain and argue and go, ‘Oh, this isn’t fair. That’s not right.’”
Ranked fighters should pay close attention to that warning. A real reset could mean more than the normal weekly shuffle after a Fight Night. It could punish inactivity, reward strength of schedule, and move athletes who have been stuck in the “beat a ranked guy, maybe get one spot” purgatory. It could also create a fresh round of fury if a popular contender wakes up lower than expected.
White added, “We’ll see how it plays out over the first year,” which works like the UFC’s warning label. The promotion is not selling Monday as a perfect fix. It is selling it as the start of a new experiment in a sport where everyone already thinks their favorite fighter is ranked three spots too low.
The timing is spicy because the UFC is juggling major divisional movement. Justin Gaethje’s lightweight title win, Manel Kape’s flyweight surge, and a pile of contender traffic all feed into divisions where rankings can become matchmaking ammunition fast. Fighters use those numbers to chase title eliminators, decline dangerous opponents, and argue that the UFC owes them something. This has been a sore spot for years, from White’s own complaints to Chael Sonnen tearing into the value of UFC rankings when the list did not match the fight game’s reality.
That is why this matters beyond a leaderboard update. White has been trying to rip the rankings away from vibes and toward measurable performance, but the UFC still lives in the money-fight business. Monday’s rollout will show whether the new system actually changes the board or just gives everyone a shinier thing to yell about.

