TruHeight, a children's wellness brand positioning itself around height-growth supplements, announced a 2026 tryout series for high school basketball players, formalizing its expansion into pre-collegiate NIL territory. The company is signing athletes before they reach NCAA eligibility, a tactic that secures brand loyalty at a lower cost than bidding against apparel companies and collectives once players arrive on campus.
The tryout series targets high school juniors and seniors in 2025 and 2026, offering NIL deals to selected athletes who will promote TruHeight's vitamin and protein products on social media. The company has been operating a smaller pilot program since late 2023, paying low-four-figure monthly retainers to roughly 30 high school players across Texas, California, and Florida. This expansion suggests the pilot converted well enough to justify scaling before the NCAA's transfer portal opens each spring.
The move reflects a structural shift in NIL sponsorship timing. Brands that wait until athletes commit to Power Five programs face bidding wars with collectives, apparel companies, and regional car dealerships. TruHeight is paying high school juniors $500 to $2,000 per month, according to two agents familiar with the deals, locking in multi-year relationships at a fraction of what a mid-major freshman commands. The company's target demographic overlaps cleanly with its customer base—parents of adolescents concerned about height and athleticism—so the brand is effectively recruiting micro-influencers inside its distribution funnel.
The competitive pressure comes from established supplement companies like Gatorade, which launched its own high school NIL program in early 2024, and apparel brands that have quietly been providing gear and small stipends to elite prep players for decades under the old AAU economy. TruHeight's differentiation is narrow: it sells height-growth products, not general athletic nutrition, so its athlete roster skews toward basketball and volleyball players rather than football linemen or swimmers. The messaging is implicit but clear—these athletes used the product, and now they are tall enough to play Division I basketball.
Two industry dynamics make this timing logical. First, the NCAA has effectively stopped enforcing high school NIL restrictions, creating a de facto open market. Second, TruHeight raised a Series A round in mid-2024, though the company has not disclosed the amount. Investor presentations reviewed by sources close to the deal show TruHeight projecting $40 million in revenue for 2025, up from roughly $18 million in 2023, with NIL marketing accounting for a planned 15% of total ad spend.
The tryout structure itself is straightforward: regional camps in Dallas, Atlanta, and Los Angeles between March and June 2025, with 200 to 300 participants per city. Athletes submit highlight reels and academic transcripts in advance. The company selects 10 to 15 athletes per region for NIL deals, with contract lengths ranging from 12 to 24 months. The contracts include social media posting quotas—two Instagram posts per month, one TikTok per week—and appearance fees for in-person events at youth basketball tournaments.
What matters for team operators and agents is the implied valuation floor. If a high school junior is already earning $1,500 per month from TruHeight, his baseline NIL value as a college freshman is at least $2,500 to $3,000 per month, assuming he signs with a mid-major program. That reset affects how collectives budget for recruiting classes and how agents pitch endorsement deals to larger brands. It also compresses the negotiating window—athletes arriving on campus with existing sponsorships have less incentive to wait for better offers, which benefits programs that close deals early.
Watch for TruHeight's athlete retention numbers when the 2026 recruiting class enrolls in college. If the brand keeps 60% or more of its high school signees through their freshman year, expect competitor brands to launch similar pre-collegiate programs by late 2025. Also watch the NCAA's response—high school NIL remains a gray area, and any regulatory clarification would either accelerate or freeze this category. The company's next milestone is the March 2025 Dallas tryout, which will indicate whether the brand can execute logistics at scale or whether this remains a pilot dressed as an expansion.
The takeaway
TruHeight is locking high school basketball players into NIL deals at **$500-$2,000/month**, undercutting college-level bidding wars and resetting freshman valuation floors.
nilhigh school basketballtruheightsponsorshipathlete marketingncaa
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