The College Sports Commission's NIL Go clearinghouse has rejected $89.7 million in proposed athlete compensation agreements since launching in June 2025, while approving more than $350 million in deals through the same portal. The 20.4% rejection rate—higher than early industry projections—suggests the voluntary compliance mechanism is catching structural problems before they reach NCAA enforcement desks.
NIL Go processes athlete deals submitted by collectives, brands, and university compliance offices before money moves. Rejected agreements typically fail on pay-for-play language, impermissible inducements tied to enrollment decisions, or valuation benchmarks that don't survive arm's-length scrutiny. The clearinghouse doesn't publish rejection reasons, but three athletic directors told associates the most common flag is compensation structured around recruiting commitments rather than name, image, and likeness usage. One Power Four compliance officer said her office now submits term sheets to NIL Go before finalizing agreements with collectives, adding 14 days to deal cycles but eliminating post-signature revision requests.
The $350 million approved figure tracks with earlier estimates that collectives would funnel $1.2 billion to athletes in the first full academic year under the July 2024 settlement framework. Six months in, the clearinghouse is pacing toward $700 million annualized—a gap explained partly by delayed collective fundraising and partly by deals structured outside the NIL Go system. The clearinghouse is voluntary; schools and collectives that skip the process accept higher NCAA audit risk in exchange for speed. Two collectives operating in the SEC told board members they route roughly 65% of deals through NIL Go, reserving the remainder for brand partnerships with established valuation methods and legal review already completed.
The rejection rate matters because it defines the boundaries of permissible athlete compensation in an environment where NCAA enforcement remains inconsistent. Athletic directors sizing budgets for the 2025-26 cycle are using NIL Go approval trends as a proxy for how aggressive they can be with collective partnerships. One general counsel at a Group of Five program said his university now requires all deals over $50,000 to pass NIL Go review before the collective cuts a check, effectively outsourcing part of the compliance function to the clearinghouse. That shifts liability but also creates a bottleneck: NIL Go's current processing time averages 11 days, according to two collectives, which compresses timelines when athletes enter the spring transfer portal expecting deals closed within 72 hours of commitment.
The College Sports Commission has not disclosed whether rejected deals are resubmitted after revision or abandoned entirely. One former NCAA enforcement staffer now advising collectives said roughly 40% of flagged agreements return in modified form and pass on second review, typically after removing recruiting-contingent language or adjusting valuations to match comparable deals in the same sport and market. The $89.7 million rejected figure includes initial submissions only; the total dollar volume flagged before eventual approval is likely higher.
What to watch: spring transfer portal windows open in late April. Collectives that haven't built NIL Go submission into their recruiting timelines will either skip the clearinghouse or lose athletes to programs that can close deals faster. The College Sports Commission is expected to release quarterly rejection breakdowns by sport and deal size in early March, which will show whether football and basketball—where deal values are highest—face stricter scrutiny than Olympic sports. Two collectives have told board members they're lobbying for expedited review tiers for brand deals under $25,000, which would free up clearinghouse capacity for high-risk recruiting agreements.
NIL Go's rejection rate is already higher than the 12-15% industry attorneys projected in June. That spread is the cost of compliance in a system where the rules are still being written in real time.