The University of Kentucky signed a 12-year extension with Fanatics covering apparel, merchandise, and a revenue-sharing NIL program that pays Wildcat athletes a percentage of jersey and name-image-likeness product sales. Financial terms were not disclosed. The deal runs through 2037 and includes retail operations inside Rupp Arena and Kroger Field, replacing the previous arrangement that separated venue merchandising from the broader licensing contract.
Kentucky becomes the first SEC program to embed NIL compensation directly into its primary apparel partnership. Under the structure, student-athletes receive royalties on items bearing their name, number, or image sold through Fanatics' online and physical retail channels. The university declined to specify the royalty rate or whether revenue flows through the Kentucky Players Fund—the school's official NIL collective—or is distributed individually. Fanatics will also operate a dedicated storefront for athlete-branded merchandise, similar to the NFL and NBA player shops it launched in 2023. Kentucky's athletic department generated $21.3 million in licensing and merchandise revenue in fiscal 2024, according to its most recent financial report.
The timing matters. The NCAA's proposed House v. NCAA settlement, expected to receive final approval by April, allows schools to share up to $20.5 million annually in direct athlete payments starting in 2025-26. Schools are now racing to formalize NIL structures that keep revenue share separate from that cap. Kentucky's Fanatics deal does exactly that: merchandising royalties fall outside the revenue-share pool because they are contingent on individual athlete marketability, not roster status. Tennessee and Texas have explored similar frameworks with their apparel partners, but no deal has been announced with this level of formalization.
Kentucky's leverage is unusual. The Wildcats rank second nationally in collegiate merchandise sales behind only Texas, driven by basketball's blue-blood status and football's steady SEC middle tier. Fanatics paid $365 million in 2022 to acquire the NBA's online retail operation; its collegiate division has since signed Oregon, Penn State, and now Kentucky to extensions that bundle e-commerce, venue retail, and NIL infrastructure. The firm is positioning itself as the de facto NIL payment rail for apparel deals, a role that could matter significantly if schools begin treating merchandise royalties as a distinct revenue class when recruiting.
Rupp Arena's inclusion is the other signal. Kentucky previously licensed venue merchandising separately, a relic of the building's public ownership structure. Folding it into the Fanatics deal suggests the university has either renegotiated terms with Lexington's arena authority or Fanatics agreed to a revenue-sharing arrangement that makes the operational complexity worth it. Either way, it consolidates Kentucky's retail presence under one partner at a time when in-venue sales are declining and online fulfillment drives margin.
Watch for Tennessee and Alabama to announce similar NIL-embedded extensions before the start of 2025-26. Both are in active negotiations with their apparel partners and both have athletic departments that generate north of $15 million annually in licensing revenue. If Fanatics can replicate this structure at three or four marquee SEC programs, it effectively owns the NIL merchandising layer across the conference's top revenue generators.
Kentucky's next licensing report, due in June, will show whether Fanatics' infrastructure drives incremental sales or simply formalizes revenue that was already flowing to athletes informally.
The takeaway
Kentucky formalizes NIL royalties inside its Fanatics extension, creating a revenue class outside the House settlement cap.
nilfanaticsseckentuckymerchandisingcollegiate
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