All 16 NRL clubs should be break-even financial ventures within three years after negotiating a historic funding agreement with the NRL.
The game's governing body announced on Thursday it will give $100 million extra per year to the clubs until 2022 and has pledged to invest the same amount again in grassroots funding.
The announcement comes after rugby league's $1.8 billion TV deal was finalised last week, and a marathon meeting between club chairpeople and ARL Commission chairman John Grant at Rugby League Central on Wednesday.
In other key developments: Grant said competition expansion was not on the agenda, the NRL will combat player burnout by hopefully eliminating five-day turnarounds by 2018 and a long list of candidates as Dave Smith's successor has been drawn up.
A new NRL chief executive is unlikely to be in place for the start of the 2016 season, regardless Melbourne chairman Bart Campbell, who doubles as a spokesman for the 16 clubs, said the game's financial future was secure, including for fiscally challenged clubs such as Wests Tigers, St George Illawarra and Newcastle.