The House v. NCAA settlement massively shifts the NCAA’s business model

May 24, 2024
Yesterday, the NCAA Board of Governors and the Power Five conferences voted to settlement terms in House v. NCAA, the lawsuit claiming the NCAA’s pre–NIL ban on student-athlete compensation violated antitrust regulations. The settlement, if approved by the judge, will change college sports’ business model, creating industry-altering shockwaves.
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The House v. NCAA settlement massively shifts the NCAA’s business modelThe House v. NCAA settlement massively shifts the NCAA’s business model
Source: Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

The GIST: Yesterday, the NCAA Board of Governors and the Power Five conferences voted to settlement terms in House v. NCAA, the lawsuit claiming the NCAA’s pre–NIL ban on student-athlete compensation violated antitrust regulations. The settlement, if approved by the judge, will change college sports’ business model, creating industry-altering shockwaves.

The details: They’re still emerging, but sources say the NCAA will owe nearly $2.8B in damages (aka back pay) to Division I athletes who were barred from earning NIL money between 2016 and the 2021 NIL legalization. About $1.2B will come from the NCAA’s reserves, with the rest raised by withholding revenue distributions to conferences and schools for the next 10 years.

  • More crucially, settling also means a new revenue-sharing model: Starting in fall 2025, schools can opt to distribute up to $20M of their own revenue directly to athletes each year — which many predict will become required spending to stay competitive at the most elite level. In other words, pay-for-play is officially here.
  • This essentially kills the NCAA’s beleaguered amateurism model, but it doesn’t automatically make athletes official school employees (or grant them all the associated federal labor protections). There’s still lots of negotiating and lobbying to be done before that happens.

What it means: Even for Power Four programs with massive revenue streams, funneling up to $20M per year to athletes (not to mention losing NCAA–provided revenue) will require some major budget rearranging. And at smaller schools without powerhouse football programs, like those in the Big East and Big Sky conferences, that could mean cuts to sports and athlete resources.

What’s next: Even after a settlement, there will be many unanswered questions, particularly regarding the impact of revenue-sharing on non-revenue sports and female athletes. There’s also another active antitrust case, Fontenot v. NCAA, which could take things even further. No matter what happens, college sports will never be the same as it was.