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NCAA House Settlement: A Look At The House Settlement & NCAA Implications

Colton Pool by Colton Pool
June 18, 2025
Ohio State coach Ryan Day

AP Photo/Jay LaPrete

The House vs. NCAA settlement has been central to conversations around college football this offseason. Now that it’s approved, it could drastically change the sport as we know it.

The settlement covers many facets of college athletics. It certainly impacts the FBS, both the Power Four and the Group of Five, as well as the FCS and other divisions of football and other sports.

Here’s more about the House v. NCAA Settlement.

House vs. NCAA Settlement Details

House v. NCAA is a legal case that revolves around the payment of college athletes. This allows schools to pay athletes directly for the first time.

While this does bring even more change to an already chaotic aspect to college sports, some hope that this brings about more stability in the long-term. This, some believe, will allow the NCAA or other governing bodies to enforce more regulations regarding how athletes are paid.

Many schools have already opted into the House settlement, meaning they are on board with how the case shakes out and will eventually pay college athletes directly. 

But some have opted out, meaning they won’t pay athletes themselves. While that will save the schools money, it will likely impact their recruiting efforts and therefore their performance during competitions.


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NIL House Settlement Back Pay

The House settlement will result in the NCAA and Division I schools paying $2.78 billion in back pay for students who competed in sports between 2016-24.

The House v. NCAA case materialized after collegiate basketball player Sedona Prince and swimmer Grant House, among other college athletes, filed a lawsuit five years ago saying that the NCAA and the power conferences unified against paying athletes and prevented them from profiting off their names, images, and likenesses (NIL).

Do Schools Opting Out Of The House Settlement Have To Provide Back Pay?

All Division I schools will have to contribute money toward back damages as a result of the House settlement, regardless if they opt into it. However, most or all of that for some schools could be taken out of the money normally disbursed from NCAA events like the NCAA Tournaments in men’s and women’s basketball.

Where House Settlement Money Will Come From

As for the $2.78 billion in back damages, the NCAA is to pay 60% of it while 40% of it will come from schools themselves. That’s to be paid out over 10 years. A good portion of the schools’ payments will come out of money that usually goes to them for NCAA competitions.

Schools can also pay students for NIL rights at a maximum of 22% of annual revenue that comes from broadcast deals and tickets.

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House v. NCAA Settlement NIL Cap

Several sources estimate a cap for how much schools will pay athletes directly will be established and that number would be $20.5 million per institution. That number would go up about 4% per year.

That wouldn’t be a minimum in this instance, just a maximum.

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