NIL is a $2.6 billion industry in 2026. Most of that money goes to football and men's basketball at Power 4 schools. But the offers are reaching high school sophomores now — and
nobody is explaining this to families in plain English.
DraftWorth exists because your family shouldn't need a sports lawyer to understand what "Name, Image, and Likeness" actually means for your kid's future.
In a recent survey, among coaches whose athletes had been approached by agents, the vast majority said those agents were not acting in the student's interest. Unlike professional sports, NIL agents don't have to register with anyone. There is no certification. No licensing. Anyone can call themselves an NIL agent.
NIL stands for Name, Image, and Likeness. It means a student-athlete can earn money from being themselves — their face, their name, their social media presence. Here's where the money comes from.
A local car dealership, protein shake company, or clothing brand pays an athlete to post on Instagram, appear at an event, or let them use the athlete's photo in an ad. This is the most basic form of NIL.
Groups of wealthy alumni and boosters pool money into a fund. They pay athletes at a specific school in exchange for "promotional activities" — sometimes as little as a single Instagram post. This is where the big recruiting money flows. Many collectives operate in legal gray areas.
Starting July 2026, schools can pay athletes directly from their revenue. Each school gets a $20.5 million cap. This is the result of the House v. NCAA settlement and fundamentally changes how athletes get paid.
Athletes with a following can monetize their own content — YouTube, TikTok, Instagram. Some earn through affiliate links, sponsored posts, or selling their own merchandise. You don't need a million followers. Athletes with 10K–50K are seeing the fastest growth in offers.
Athletes can run their own training camps, charge for lessons, sign autographs at events, or get paid to show up at store openings. This is especially common for high school athletes in states that allow it.
Athletes can sell jerseys, trading cards, or branded merch with their name and likeness. Some platforms handle production and shipping — the athlete just approves the design and promotes it.
NBC News reviewed a dozen written offers to high schoolers that legal experts described as predatory — including commissions up to 40% and contracts full of legal traps. Here's what to watch for.
Some contracts grant the company a permanent, worldwide right to use your kid's name, face, and likeness forever — even after the deal ends. No additional payment required. No expiration date.
The agent gets a cut of your earnings for years after you fire them. Good agents earn from the work they do — not from your entire future career. If termination doesn't end the payments, walk away.
"This offer expires in 24 hours." Legitimate professionals don't rush families into signing contracts. If someone is creating urgency, they're usually hiding something in the fine print.
"Athlete will be compensated as determined by the brand." If the contract doesn't spell out the exact dollar amount, payment date, and conditions — it's not a real offer. It's a trap.
A contract blocking your athlete from ALL deals in a category (like "all athletic footwear") can cost them far more than the deal is worth. Exclusivity should be narrow and well-compensated.
The brand can cancel anytime for any reason, but the athlete is locked in. Some contracts give brands 8+ exit routes while giving the athlete zero. If it's not mutual, it's not fair.
Contracts that let the brand cancel based on a family member's behavior on social media. Your mom's Facebook post shouldn't void your kid's NIL deal.
"Must reach 50K followers by end of season." NIL compensation should reflect the athlete's current value — not speculative growth targets that may never happen.
This is not optional. Not for the big deals. For every deal. A one-hour consultation with a sports attorney costs $200–$500. A bad NIL contract can cost your family tens of thousands and years of your child's earning potential.
It depends entirely on what state you're in. Rules vary wildly — some states let middle schoolers sign, others ban it completely. Here's where things stand in 2026.
| State | HS NIL Status | Key Restrictions | Notes |
|---|
The IRS treats student-athletes as independent contractors. That means no taxes are withheld — and the bill comes due in April. Most families are blindsided by this.
Get a rough estimate of what NIL deals might look like based on sport, conference, role, and social media following. This is an estimate — not a guarantee.
Tournament deals, viral clips, and brand spikes all generate taxable income. The IRS Taxpayer Advocate specifically flagged March Madness as a NIL tax event. Here's what athletes and families need to do before April 15.
Breaking down the new NCAA revenue-sharing model: eligibility requirements, payment mechanics, tax treatment, and what athletes must know before July 1.
New NCAA rule change allows uniform patches — what athletes need to know about tax implications, collective deals, and earning potential.
Full breakdown of NIL spending by sport, school, and deal type — with data from OpenDorse and NCAA filings.
Every state's rules, restrictions, disclosure requirements, and gotchas — in one place. Updated as laws change.
A printable, plain-English checklist for parents to use before their athlete signs anything.
A 12-page guide that breaks down NIL deals, taxes, red flags, and what to actually do when your kid gets an offer. Written for parents — not lawyers, not agents. Plain English, zero sales pitch.
The stuff the industry assumes you already know (but most families don't).