Presidential DocumentExecutive Order 143222025-14392

Saving College Sports

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Published
July 29, 2025
Signed
July 24, 2025

Issuing agencies

Executive Office of the President

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 90 Issue 143 (Tuesday, July 29, 2025)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 90, Number 143 (Tuesday, July 29, 2025)]
[Presidential Documents]
[Pages 35821-35824]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2025-14392]




                        Presidential Documents 



Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 143 / Tuesday, July 29, 2025 / 
Presidential Documents

[[Page 35821]]


                Executive Order 14322 of July 24, 2025

                
Saving College Sports

                By the authority vested in me as President by the 
                Constitution and the laws of the United States of 
                America, it is hereby ordered:

                Section 1. Purpose and Policy. College sports are a 
                uniquely American institution that provide life-
                changing educational and leadership-development 
                opportunities to more than 500,000 student-athletes 
                through almost $4 billion in scholarships each year. 
                College athletics also provide substantial support to 
                local economies and form an indelible part of family 
                activities, pastimes, and culture in many communities.

                While major college football games can draw tens of 
                millions of television viewers and attendees, they 
                feature only a very small sample of the many athletes 
                who benefit from the transformational opportunities 
                that college athletics provide. Sixty-five percent of 
                the 2024 United States Olympic Team members were 
                current or former National Collegiate Athletic 
                Association (NCAA) varsity athletes, and approximately 
                seventy-five percent were collegiate athletes. The 2024 
                United States Olympic Team earned 126 total medals, 
                leading the overall medal count for the eighth 
                consecutive Summer Olympic Games.

                Beyond driving our unrivaled success in international 
                competition, college athletes are more likely to report 
                better outcomes in important respects during college 
                and after graduation. A substantial majority of female 
                executives at the largest American companies 
                participated in sports during adolescence, many at the 
                high school or collegiate level, and examples of 
                business leaders and former Presidents who played 
                college sports are legion. It is no exaggeration to say 
                that America's system of collegiate athletics plays an 
                integral role in forging the leaders that drive our 
                Nation's success.

                Yet the future of college sports is under unprecedented 
                threat. Waves of recent litigation against collegiate 
                athletics governing rules have eliminated limits on 
                athlete compensation, pay-for-play recruiting 
                inducements, and transfers between universities, 
                unleashing a sea change that threatens the viability of 
                college sports. While changes providing some increased 
                benefits and flexibility to student-athletes were 
                overdue and should be maintained, the inability to 
                maintain reasonable rules and guardrails is a mortal 
                threat to most college sports.

                To illustrate, following a 2021 antitrust ruling from 
                the United States Supreme Court striking down NCAA 
                restrictions, the NCAA changed its rules to permit 
                players to receive compensation for their name, image, 
                and likeness (NIL) from third parties. But guardrails 
                designed to ensure that these were legitimate, market-
                value NIL payments for endorsements or similar 
                services, rather than simply pay-for-play inducements, 
                were eliminated through litigation. Other limits on 
                player transfers among schools were also taken down 
                through litigation.

                This has created an out-of-control, rudderless system 
                in which competing university donors engage in bidding 
                wars for the best players, who can change teams each 
                season. Meanwhile, more than 30 States have passed 
                their own NIL laws in a chaotic race to the bottom, 
                sometimes to gain temporary competitive advantages for 
                their major collegiate teams. As a result, players at 
                some universities will receive more than $50 million 
                per year, mostly for the revenue-generating sports like 
                football. Entering the 2024 season, players on the 
                eventual college football national champion

[[Page 35822]]

                team were being paid around $20 million annually. By 
                the 2025 season, football players at one university 
                will reportedly be paid $35-40 million, with revenue-
                sharing included.

                This not only reduces competition and parity by 
                creating an oligarchy of teams that can simply buy the 
                best players--including the best players from less-
                wealthy programs at the end of each season--but the 
                imperative that university donors must devote ever-
                escalating resources to compete in the revenue-
                generating sports like football and basketball siphons 
                away the resources necessary to support the panoply of 
                non-revenue sports. Absent guardrails to stop the 
                madness and ensure a reasonable, balanced use of 
                resources across collegiate athletic programs that 
                preserves their educational and developmental benefits, 
                many college sports will soon cease to exist.

                A national solution is urgently needed to prevent this 
                situation from deteriorating beyond repair and to 
                protect non-revenue sports, including many women's 
                sports, that comprise the backbone of intercollegiate 
                athletics, drive American superiority at the Olympics 
                and other international competitions, and catalyze 
                hundreds of thousands of student-athletes to fuel 
                American success in myriad ways.

                Attempting to create some guardrails and shelter from 
                litigation, colleges have adopted a new regime, 
                deciding to pay athletes directly and simultaneously 
                limit the total number of athletes on their campuses. 
                Given that the new roster limits, by exceeding the 
                scholarship limits they replace, will increase the 
                potential number of scholarships available in many 
                sports, this opportunity must be utilized to strengthen 
                and expand non-revenue sports. Simultaneously, the 
                third-party market of pay-for-play inducements must be 
                eliminated before its insatiable demand for resources 
                dries up support for non-revenue sports. Otherwise, a 
                crucial American asset will be lost.

                It is the policy of my Administration that all college 
                sports should be preserved and, where possible, 
                expanded. My Administration will therefore provide the 
                stability, fairness, and balance necessary to protect 
                student-athletes, collegiate athletic scholarships and 
                opportunities, and the special American institution of 
                college sports. It is common sense that college sports 
                are not, and should not be, professional sports, and my 
                Administration will take action accordingly.

                Sec. 2. Protecting and Expanding Women's and Non-
                Revenue Sports and Prohibiting Third-Party Pay-for-Play 
                Payments. (a) It is the policy of the executive branch 
                that opportunities for scholarships and collegiate 
                athletic competition in women's and non-revenue sports 
                must be preserved and, where possible, expanded, 
                including specifically as follows with respect to the 
                2025-2026 athletic season and future athletic seasons:

(i) collegiate athletic departments with greater than $125,000,000 in 
revenue during the 2024-2025 athletic season should provide more 
scholarship opportunities in non-revenue sports than during the 2024-2025 
athletic season and should provide the maximum number of roster spots for 
non-revenue sports permitted under the applicable collegiate athletic 
rules;

(ii) college athletic departments with greater than $50,000,000 in revenue 
during the 2024-2025 athletic season should provide at least as many 
scholarship opportunities in non-revenue sports as provided during the 
2024-2025 athletic season and should provide the maximum number of roster 
spots for non-revenue sports permitted under the applicable collegiate 
athletic rules; and

(iii) college athletic departments with $50,000,000 or less in revenue 
during the 2024-2025 athletic season or that do not have any revenue-
generating sports should not disproportionately reduce scholarship 
opportunities or roster spots for sports based on the revenue that the 
sport generates.

                     (b) It is the policy of the executive branch that 
                any revenue-sharing permitted between universities and 
                collegiate athletes should be designed and

[[Page 35823]]

                implemented in a manner that preserves or expands 
                scholarships and collegiate athletic opportunities in 
                women's and non-revenue sports.
                    (c) To preserve the critical educational and 
                developmental benefits of collegiate athletics for our 
                Nation, it is the policy of the executive branch that 
                third-party, pay-for-play payments to collegiate 
                athletes are improper and should not be permitted by 
                universities. This policy does not apply to 
                compensation provided to an athlete for the fair market 
                value that the athlete provides to a third party, such 
                as for a brand endorsement.
                    (d) Within 30 days of the date of this order, the 
                Secretary of Education, in consultation with the 
                Attorney General, the Secretary of Health and Human 
                Services, the Secretary of Education, and the Chairman 
                of the Federal Trade Commission, shall develop a plan 
                to advance the policies set forth in subsections (a)-
                (c) of this section through all available and 
                appropriate regulatory, enforcement, and litigation 
                mechanisms, including Federal funding decisions, 
                enforcement of Title IX of the Education Amendments Act 
                of 1972, prohibiting unconstitutional actions by States 
                to regulate interstate commerce, and enforcement of 
                other constitutional and statutory protections, and by 
                working with the Congress and State governments, as 
                appropriate.

                Sec. 3. Student-Athlete Status. The Secretary of Labor 
                and the National Labor Relations Board shall determine 
                and implement the appropriate measures with respect to 
                clarifying the status of collegiate athletes, including 
                through guidance, rules, or other appropriate actions, 
                that will maximize the educational benefits and 
                opportunities provided by higher education institutions 
                through athletics.

                Sec. 4. Legal Protections for College Athletics from 
                Lawsuits. (a) The Attorney General and the Chairman of 
                the Federal Trade Commission shall work to stabilize 
                and preserve college athletics through litigation, 
                guidelines, policies, or other actions, as appropriate, 
                by protecting the rights and interests of student-
                athletes and the long-term availability of collegiate 
                athletic scholarships and opportunities when such 
                elements are unreasonably challenged under antitrust or 
                other legal theories.

                     (b) Within 60 days of the date of this order, to 
                advance the purposes of subsection (a) of this section, 
                the Attorney General and the Chairman of the Federal 
                Trade Commission shall:

(i) review, and as necessary revise, litigation positions, guidelines, 
policies, or other actions; and

(ii) develop a plan to implement appropriate future litigation positions, 
guidelines, policies, or other actions.

                Sec. 5. Protecting Development of the United States 
                Olympic Team. The Assistant to the President for 
                Domestic Policy and the Director of the White House 
                Office of Public Liaison shall consult the United 
                States Olympic and Paralympic Committee and other 
                appropriate organizations of American athletes about 
                safeguarding the integral role and competitive 
                advantage that American collegiate athletics provide in 
                developing athletes to represent our Nation in 
                international athletic competitions.

                Sec. 6. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order 
                shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or 
the head thereof; or

(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget 
relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

                    (b) This order shall be implemented consistent with 
                applicable law and subject to the availability of 
                appropriations.
                    (c) This order is not intended to, and does not, 
                create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, 
                enforceable at law or in equity by any party against 
                the United States, its departments, agencies, or 
                entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any 
                other person.

[[Page 35824]]

                     (d) The costs for publication of this order shall 
                be borne by the Department of Education.
                <GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT>
                
                    (Presidential Sig.)

                THE WHITE HOUSE,

                    July 24, 2025.

[FR Doc. 2025-14392
Filed 7-28-25; 11:15 am]
Billing code 4000-01-P


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Indexed from Federal Register on July 29, 2025.

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