The House v. NCAA settlement, approved on June 6, 2025, fundamentally changed college athletics by allowing schools to directly pay athletes through revenue sharing. But it also created a new layer of oversight for third-party NIL deals—and that's where NIL Go comes in.
Understanding NIL Go is now essential for any college athlete signing endorsement deals. Failure to report, or signing deals that don't meet the requirements, can result in being declared ineligible for competition.
What Is NIL Go?
NIL Go is the digital platform created by the College Sports Commission (CSC) and administered by Deloitte to collect, review, and monitor all third-party NIL agreements involving Division I student-athletes. It launched on June 11, 2025, shortly after Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval of the House settlement.
According to CSC guidance, NIL Go serves three primary functions:
- Collecting deal information — Athletes submit details about their NIL contracts through the portal
- Reviewing for compliance — Deloitte evaluates whether deals meet the "valid business purpose" and "fair market value" standards
- Monitoring and enforcement — The CSC can impose penalties for non-compliance, including declaring athletes ineligible
As of July 2025, more than 12,000 athletes and 1,100 institutional users had registered on the platform, and over 1,500 deals had been cleared—ranging from three figures to seven figures in value.
The $600 Reporting Threshold
Under NCAA Bylaw 22, all third-party NIL agreements valued at $600 or more must be reported to NIL Go. This threshold applies to:
- Cash payments
- Products or merchandise received
- Services provided in exchange for your NIL
- Any other form of compensation
If you receive multiple payments from the same party that total $600 or more during a reporting period, you must report all payments—even if each individual payment was under $600.
Reporting Deadlines
The timeline for reporting depends on your status:
| Athlete Status | Reporting Deadline |
|---|---|
| Current Division I athletes | 5 business days after signing |
| Incoming freshmen | 14 days after enrollment OR before first competition (whichever is first) |
| Transfer students | 14 days after enrollment OR before first competition (whichever is first) |
| Junior college transfers | 14 days after enrollment OR before first competition (whichever is first) |
Important: For incoming athletes, the 14-day rule applies to all NIL contracts worth $600 or more—including deals you signed before enrolling, potentially years earlier. You must disclose these existing agreements when you arrive on campus.
The Three Criteria NIL Go Evaluates
When you submit a deal to NIL Go, Deloitte evaluates it against three criteria established in the House settlement and NCAA bylaws:
1. Payor Association
Is the person or entity paying you connected to your school? Deals with "Associated Entities or Individuals"—meaning boosters, alumni, or others with connections and rooting interests in your school—face additional scrutiny.
2. Valid Business Purpose
Under NCAA Rule 22.1.3, the deal must involve promoting or endorsing goods or services sold to the public for profit. The CSC has clarified that this means actual commercial use of your name, image, and likeness—not simply paying you to attend a school.
3. Range of Compensation
Is the amount you're being paid "commensurate with compensation paid to similarly situated individuals with comparable NIL value"? Deloitte uses data from past endorsement deals—both college and professional—to establish fair market value ranges.
What Gets Approved vs. Rejected
Based on CSC guidance issued in July 2025, here's how to understand what types of deals will likely pass or fail NIL Go review:
Endorsing a local restaurant, appearing in advertisements for an apparel company, social media promotion for a legitimate business, autograph signings at a car dealership, brand ambassador deals with companies selling products to consumers.
Payments from a collective simply to attend a school, appearances at collective fundraising events (even if public), merchandise sales where proceeds primarily pay athletes, deals where compensation significantly exceeds your fair market value, any arrangement that is essentially "pay-for-play."
The 70% Rejection Estimate
Deloitte officials have stated that approximately 70% of past NIL collective deals would have been rejected under NIL Go's criteria. This statistic underscores how significantly the new rules change what's permissible.
The key distinction: NIL deals must involve actual commercial use of your name, image, and likeness. When an athlete is paid to matriculate to a school—even if labeled an "NIL deal"—that's not NIL. It's pay-for-play, which remains prohibited.
What Happens If You Don't Comply
Under amended NCAA bylaws adopted in October 2025, the College Sports Commission can impose disciplinary action for NIL Go violations:
- Failure to report: Missing the 5-day (or 14-day) deadline can result in being declared ineligible for competition
- Deal rejection: If your submitted deal is rejected, you may need to terminate the agreement or face eligibility consequences
- False attestation: Athletes must attest during registration that all contracts have been or will be reported—false statements can trigger penalties
Many athletes—especially those not on campus during summer—have been largely unaware of NIL Go and its requirements. Schools are responsible for educating their athletes, but ultimately, compliance is your responsibility.
How to Prepare Your Contract for NIL Go
Before signing any NIL deal worth $600 or more, make sure it can pass NIL Go review:
- Verify the business purpose — Is the company paying you selling goods or services to the public for profit? If it's a collective with no commercial operations, be cautious.
- Check compensation reasonableness — Is the amount in line with what athletes of similar profile receive? Significantly inflated payments will be flagged.
- Document the deliverables — What are you actually doing in exchange for payment? Social media posts, appearances, endorsements? The more clearly defined, the better.
- Review payor relationships — Is the entity connected to your school through boosters or alumni? These deals face extra scrutiny.
- Set up reporting reminders — You have only 5 business days after signing to report. Calendar it.
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