College Football

NIL is destroying college football parity: Texas schools edition

Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals have fundamentally altered college football. The impact is especially visible among Texas schools.

The NIL landscape in Texas (Source: On3 NIL Valuations, Opendorse data):

  • Texas and Texas A&M have the largest NIL collectives in the state and among the largest in the country.
  • Estimated annual NIL spending at Texas: $10M+. At Texas A&M: $10M+.
  • TCU, Baylor, Texas Tech, and SMU spend a fraction of that. Estimates range from $2-5M.
  • UNT, UTSA, and other smaller programs: under $1M.

What this means on the field:

  • Texas and A&M can out-bid any school in the state for top recruits and transfer portal targets.
  • The gap between the haves and have-nots was always there in recruiting, but NIL has made it explicit and quantifiable.
  • A 4-star recruit from Allen High School can now compare dollar figures, not just facilities and tradition.

The transfer portal compound effect:

  • NIL plus the transfer portal means players can leave programs for more money at any time.
  • TCU's 2022 title game team was partially dismantled by portal departures to higher-paying programs.
  • Source: Transfer portal tracking data from 247Sports.

The argument for NIL:

  • Athletes generate billions in revenue. They deserve compensation.
  • Football players at major programs are full-time employees in everything but name.

The argument against:

  • It has created a free agency system without salary caps or contract enforcement.
  • Schools with richer booster bases win. Merit and coaching matter less.
  • The student-athlete experience is now indistinguishable from professional sports, without the protections of a players' union.

Sources:

  • On3 — NIL valuation database
  • Opendorse — NIL deal tracking
  • 247Sports — transfer portal data
  • NCAA — NIL policy documents
Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 2, 2026, 1:15 AM

4 Comments

Players deserving compensation is not debatable. The question is whether the implementation is fair. Right now it is pure capitalism with no rules. That is bad for 90% of programs.

Texas and A&M spending $10M+ per year on NIL while UNT spends under $1M. That is not competition. That is a different sport entirely.

As a TCU fan, watching our national championship game roster get raided by Texas and A&M via NIL offers was gut-wrenching. We built something special and money tore it apart.

u/budget_dfw·

The NFL has a salary cap for competitive balance. College football has none. Until there is a cap or standardized NIL framework, the rich will keep getting richer.