The Indiana High School Athletics Association board voted Thursday to permit "personal branding activities" for secondary school athletes starting next academic year, inserting Indiana into the expanding patchwork of state-level NIL regimes below the NCAA's jurisdiction.
The vote passed without disclosed opposition. Implementation details remain unpublished, but the IHSAA's existing amateur-status bylaws will require amendment before the 2025-26 school year. Indiana joins 37 states that now allow some form of high school NIL participation, up from 11 states in January 2023 when California's law took effect. The IHSAA did not specify dollar thresholds, third-party collective restrictions, or whether school logos may appear in athlete endorsements—three variables that create enforcement chaos in states with earlier adoption.
The timing matters because the college NIL market is hardening. Collectives are consolidating. Smaller programs are cutting seven-figure checks for quarterbacks while walk-ons get Cameo revenue. High school NIL was initially framed as entrepreneurship—a local car dealership paying a state champion wrestler $2,500 for an Instagram post. The reality is more surgical. Recruiting pipelines now start at 15 years old. A five-star basketball prospect in Fort Wayne can lock a relationship with an Oregon booster's shell LLC two years before signing day, all structured as "personal brand consulting." The IHSAA's approval doesn't create that dynamic; it stops pretending the dynamic doesn't exist.
For Indiana's 410 member high schools, the compliance burden shifts in-house. Athletic directors accustomed to policing shoe allowances now need to distinguish permissible deals from pay-for-play violations that still, theoretically, violate IHSAA transfer rules. The association has 14 full-time staff members. There is no NIL auditor line item in the current budget. Enforcement will be complaint-driven, which means enforcement will be selective.
The business structure question is unresolved. Most state frameworks require minors to operate through a parent or guardian, creating a tax and liability tangle. Indiana law allows 14-year-olds to form LLCs with parental consent, but the IHSAA has not clarified whether athlete LLCs may contract directly with collectives tied to in-state universities. Purdue and Indiana University both run donor-funded NIL entities; neither commented on whether high school outreach is planned. Worth noting: the NCAA's April guidance memo warned Division I programs against "premature recruiting contact" facilitated by third-party NIL deals, but the memo carries no enforcement mechanism and three Power Four programs are already under investigation for conduct the memo explicitly described.
Mark Cuban's acknowledgment this week that he personally funded quarterback Fernando Mendoza's NIL transfer to Indiana—Mendoza is a college athlete, not high school—shows how fungible the money has become. Cuban did not disclose the amount. He described it as "helping a kid I believe in," which is also how high school NIL will be framed when a Fort Wayne point guard signs a $15,000 deal with a donor whose son happens to coach at Notre Dame.
The IHSAA will publish implementation rules by June 30, according to a spokesperson. School administrators should watch whether the final language includes a registry requirement—some states mandate public disclosure of deals above a certain threshold; others operate on an honor system. Also unresolved: whether athletes can wear branded apparel during IHSAA events, a cosmetic question with large financial implications if a shoe company wants a state tournament MVP in custom colorways.
Indiana's move removes a competitive disadvantage. Illinois and Ohio both opened high school NIL lanes in 2024. Michigan remains closed. Recruiting momentum is a real thing; basketball prospects already choose high schools based on exposure and transfer rules. Adding NIL optionality makes Indiana programs more attractive to out-of-state talent, which will trigger residency and transfer waiver disputes the IHSAA is not staffed to adjudicate quickly.
The next friction point is the first five-figure deal involving a transfer. It will happen before Thanksgiving.
The takeaway
Indiana joins 37 states allowing high school NIL, creating enforcement and transfer-waiver tangles the IHSAA's 14-person staff isn't built to handle.
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