Fundamentals
Start Here New
3 questions → your personalized NIL path
📚
NIL 101
Start here — understand the landscape first
🤝
NIL Brand Deals
Deal types, contracts, exclusivity
💰
Revenue Share
House v. NCAA — $20.5M per school
🏟️
NIL by Sport
P4 vs G5 earnings breakdown
Strategy
Leverage
Create alternatives, not dependency
🎯
Brand Building
Build your brand deliberately
🗺️
Roadmap
Year-by-year NIL plan
⚠️
Top 10 Mistakes
What consistently costs athletes money
Money & Legal
🧾
Taxes
Self-employment income reality
👥
Your Team
Attorney, CPA, advisor — who you need
🏠
For Parents
Family guide to NIL and revenue share
🎓
High School NIL
What changed in 2025
Tools & Reference
⚙️
Decision Engines Hot
Revenue, Transfer, Deal Evaluator
Readiness Checklist Hot
20-point NIL readiness score
📖
Glossary
Every term decoded
FAQ
Most common questions answered
🔗
Resources
Official sources and external links
🏫
School Tracker
Opted in vs. opted out — all 300+ schools
📊
Brand Deal Estimator
Your social following → your market rate
⚖️
School Comparison
Compare two schools side-by-side
Start Here — Find Your Path Hub
Fundamentals
NIL 101 NIL Brand Deals Revenue Share NIL by Sport
Strategy
Leverage Brand Building Roadmap Top 10 Mistakes
Money & Legal
Taxes Your Team For Parents High School NIL
Tools & Reference
Decision Engines Hot Readiness Checklist Hot Glossary FAQ Resources School Tracker Brand Deal Estimator School Comparison NIL by State Compliance Calendar NIL Updates
Revenue Share is NOT NIL$20.5M cap per school per year54 schools opted out of revenue shareHouse v. NCAA settlement: $2.8BSelf-employment tax: 15.3% on NIL incomeRead every contract before signingYour sport and conference determine your ceilingNIL Collectives are not Revenue ShareRevenue Share is NOT NIL$20.5M cap per school per year54 schools opted out of revenue shareHouse v. NCAA settlement: $2.8BSelf-employment tax: 15.3% on NIL incomeRead every contract before signingYour sport and conference determine your ceilingNIL Collectives are not Revenue ShareRevenue Share is NOT NIL$20.5M cap per school per year54 schools opted out of revenue shareHouse v. NCAA settlement: $2.8BSelf-employment tax: 15.3% on NIL incomeRead every contract before signingYour sport and conference determine your ceilingNIL Collectives are not Revenue ShareRevenue Share is NOT NIL$20.5M cap per school per year54 schools opted out of revenue shareHouse v. NCAA settlement: $2.8BSelf-employment tax: 15.3% on NIL incomeRead every contract before signingYour sport and conference determine your ceilingNIL Collectives are not Revenue Share
Strategy

Top 10 Mistakes

These are not warnings. They are the specific decisions that consistently cost athletes thousands of dollars. Each one is avoidable.

Mistake 01

Signing without reading. The contract the brand sent you was written by their attorney to protect their interests. Every clause you do not read is a clause you accepted without negotiating. Exclusivity, content approval, usage rights extension, and morals clauses are the four that cost athletes the most.

Mistake 02

Confusing Revenue Share and NIL. Revenue Share is a direct school-to-athlete payment from the $20.5M cap. NIL is a commercial deal between you and a brand. Treating them as interchangeable produces a bad strategy for both. The tactics are completely different.

Mistake 03

Missing quarterly tax payments. NIL income is self-employment income. You owe estimated quarterly taxes — not just at filing. Missing quarterly payments triggers IRS underpayment penalties on top of what you already owe. This is the most common financial mistake and one of the most avoidable.

Mistake 04

Not separating business from personal money. Every dollar of NIL income that hits your personal account before taxes is a dollar you might spend before reserving 25–30% for the IRS. Open a separate business account. Move NIL payments there first. Transfer your personal share after the reserve is set.

Mistake 05

Accepting the first offer. The brand's first offer is almost never their best offer. Most brands budget 3–5× their opening bid for NIL. The athletes who counter — with data, not emotion — consistently close at higher rates. Not countering is the same as leaving money on the table.

Mistake 06

Long-term exclusivity without premium pay. Category exclusivity is common. Accepting it at a below-market rate blocks you from 6–8 future deals in the same vertical. If a brand wants exclusivity, the rate must reflect it. Standard guideline: exclusivity should add 40–60% to the base rate minimum.

Mistake 07

No LLC or business entity. Invoicing as an individual means your business liabilities are personal liabilities. An LLC creates a legal separation between you and your business activity. Cost to form: $50–$200 depending on your state. Cost of not forming one: potentially everything.

Mistake 08

Ignoring revenue share opt-in status. 54 schools have opted out of the House v. NCAA revenue share system. Athletes at those schools receive $0 from that pool. Choosing a school without knowing its opt-in status is a financial decision made without the most relevant piece of data.

Mistake 09

Building a brand without infrastructure. Posting consistently without a business email, media kit, or LLC means you cannot professionally transact when opportunity arrives. Brand-building without infrastructure is performance without the ability to monetize it.

Mistake 10

Treating NIL as a bonus, not a business. Athletes who earn the most treat NIL as a serious business — with a CPA, a legal advisor, a media kit, quarterly tax payments, and a defined strategy. Athletes who treat it as bonus money manage it like bonus money and wonder why it does not compound.

If You Do Nothing
Every mistake on this list has been made repeatedly by athletes who had access to the information to avoid it. The cost is real and cumulative.
Vyro Advisory Note
These are not rare edge cases. They are the most common outcomes we see. If even one of these applies to your situation right now, it is worth addressing today.
Next step
Evaluate Your Current Deal Structure
Open Deal Engine →
Mistake Risk Levels
Signing without readingCareer Impacting
Missing quarterly taxesHigh
No LLC formedHigh
Confusing Rev Share / NILHigh
No separate business accountMedium
Ignoring first offerMedium
Long-term exclusivity at base rateMedium
Rev share opt-in unknownHigh