The College Sports Commission approved $75 million in name, image and likeness deals for student-athletes between March 1 and April 30, 2026, according to filings the regulatory body submitted to member institutions. The eight-week total represents roughly 30 percent of all NIL transactions the CSC validated in calendar 2025, compressed into sixty days.
The volume shift reflects structural changes in how money reaches athletes. Brand partnerships that once routed through school-affiliated collectives now land as direct bilateral contracts, requiring CSC compliance review but no third-party clearing. A quarterback at a Big Ten program can sign a $2.8 million multiyear footwear deal without the athletic department touching the wire. The school reports it; the CSC stamps it; the collective never sees the invoice. March and April filings showed 87 percent of approved deals bypassed collective structures entirely, up from 41 percent in the same window last year.
This matters because it redistributes leverage. Collectives were designed to aggregate donor capital and distribute it across rosters, smoothing inequality and preserving coaching control over who got paid. Direct deals eliminate that governor. Star athletes now negotiate one-on-one with brands, agencies and family offices, often before they pick a school. Programs with thin collective war chests but strong media markets—think Arizona State, Central Florida—suddenly compete on brand access rather than booster depth. Coaches lose the ability to promise money; they can only promise exposure, which the athlete monetizes independently.
The financial tilt shows in the filings. Basketball players captured $34 million of the $75 million total despite representing fewer than 12 percent of submitted deals by headcount. Football took $29 million across 41 percent of transactions. Olympic sports—volleyball, track, gymnastics—accounted for $12 million, split among 1,847 individual approvals. The per-deal average for men's basketball was $94,000; for women's soccer it was $3,200. Collectives used to flatten that curve by pooling funds and setting roster-wide floors. Without them, market rate is market rate.
Conferences are watching the gap widen. SEC and Big Ten programs filed 68 percent of the dollar volume in March and April, but only 44 percent of the deal count, indicating their athletes command higher per-transaction values. ACC schools submitted 19 percent of deals but captured 11 percent of total dollars. The arithmetic is simple: brands pay more to associate with athletes whose games air in primetime and whose highlights circulate on platform feeds that reach 15 million impressions instead of 400,000. Media rights begat NIL asymmetry, and NIL asymmetry now feeds back into recruiting.
Sponsors are adjusting contract language. A Midwest-based insurance brand that pledged $6 million to a Big 12 collective last summer has since redirected $4.2 million into direct athlete endorsements, naming 11 football and basketball players in standalone agreements filed with the CSC in April. The brand still lists the school's marks in activation materials, but the money no longer touches the collective's checking account. Other regional sponsors are following the structure: identify the athletes, negotiate exclusivity, file with the CSC, invoice the school for facility access if necessary. The collective becomes optional.
What to watch: CSC filing deadlines for May deals close June 15, and early signals suggest the pace held. Several Power Four programs are expected to announce restructured collective models before fall camp, shifting from donor-funded pools to brand-partnership clearing houses that take percentage fees on direct deals rather than distributing lump sums. The Big Ten's spring meetings in late June will likely surface discussions about conference-level NIL policy, particularly around transfer portal timing and deal disclosure thresholds. At least two ACC schools are quietly exploring separation from their legacy collectives entirely, opting instead for in-house compliance teams that process brand contracts as they arrive.
The $75 million in eight weeks is not an aberration. It is the run rate adjusting to the incentive structure already in place.
The takeaway
Direct athlete-to-brand NIL deals now bypass collectives, concentrating money with stars and shifting recruiting leverage toward media-market exposure over booster depth.
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