Federal Judge Approves $2.8B Settlement, Opening Door For College Athlete Compensation
Jun 7, 2025, 12:38 PM | Updated: Jun 10, 2025, 9:34 am

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - JULY 23: The entrance to the NCAA's headquarters. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)
(Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)
A new era of college sports is officially upon us.
On Friday, Federal Judge Claudia Wilken, who has presided over multiple landmark NCAA cases in the past, approved the settlement, giving it the legal weight needed to move forward.
With the House v. NCAA settlement approved, here is what the timeline looks like in the next few months, per the new College Sports Commission: https://t.co/aNV6udOuCK pic.twitter.com/qdI9sXP3TU
— Pete Nakos (@PeteNakos_) June 7, 2025
The deal can be broken into three parts: reimbursing former student-athletes who narrowly missed out on the NIL era, compensating future student-athletes directly from school revenue, and implementing a laundry list of new roster and enforcement rules.
$2.77 billion in back payments will be sent to former athletes. Athletes who competed in college sports since at least 2016 are eligible for compensation. Going forward, athletic departments can share up to $20.5 million annually in revenue with their athletes, starting in the first year of the 10-year agreement. That number is expected to rise over time.
The deal resolves three major antitrust lawsuits — House v. NCAA, Hubbard v. NCAA, and Carter v. NCAA — which challenged the organization’s historic limits on athlete compensation.
NEW: Judge Claudia Wilken has approved the landmark House v. NCAA settlement, which will usher in revenue sharing and roster limits to college sports.https://t.co/UQdwaVC8ji pic.twitter.com/LDVJl4bwgb
— On3 (@On3sports) June 7, 2025
Regarding rosters, hard caps will be set for the number of players each team can support. Football programs can have no more than 105 players, 15 for basketball, 34 for baseball, and so on.
The agreement is long, and many key details are already set. However, there are understandably many questions yet to be answered. What will come of the NCAA’s remaining legal problems? Will this lead to formal salary caps or athlete unions? Could collectives evolve into full-on free agency markets? What role will boosters and sponsors play in the new college landscape? What oversight, if any, will the NCAA have in enforcing these new structures?
As soon as next month, current athletes will be grandfathered in, and schools will begin paying their players. The short gap between now and then will leave organizations scrambling to set up not just rules, but a game plan for how to navigate the new paid college athletics landscape.
How We Got Here
The new agreement finally puts an end to a nearly two-decade-old battle between college athletes, the NCAA, and federal law.
Ed O’Bannon, a former UCLA basketball player, was one of the first to stand up to the system after the 1995 Bruins national championship team was used in a video game. He felt as if he and his teammates should be compensated for the usage.
It took over a decade for NIL to come into play. Albeit a flawed system, at least the student athletes had something to show for their role in the multi-billion-dollar college sports entertainment world.
While the new system may appear more straightforward, many complexities still need to be ironed out. Even in its earliest form, it’s clear that college sports are heading in a direction that is much fairer to the student-athletes.