How do NIL collectives work and how are they taxed in 2027?
Published Jun 14, 2026 · Updated Jun 14, 2026
Direct Answer
NIL collectives are donor- and booster-funded organizations that pool money to pay a school's athletes for name, image, and likeness — and in 2027 their tax story has been rewritten: the IRS has concluded that most of them do not qualify as tax-exempt 501(c)(3) charities. In memo AM 2023-004, the IRS Chief Counsel held that paying student-athletes for their NIL is a substantial nonexempt purpose that disqualifies the organization, because the collective exists primarily to benefit the private interests of athletes rather than a charitable cause.
Without tax-deductible donations, the nonprofit collective model became untenable, so many collectives converted to for-profit structures or dissolved. Layered on top, the House settlement's revenue-sharing pool gave schools a direct way to pay athletes, and a federal executive order with operative provisions effective August 1, 2026 added more change.
The funding rails are migrating fast.
For operators, the collective tax story is a clean lesson in how a single regulatory ruling can reprice an entire funnel — when the tax incentive disappears, donor behavior and the whole funding model move with it.
1. How NIL Collectives Work
Pooling money to pay athletes
A collective is typically separate from the university — funded by boosters, alumni, and fans — that aggregates contributions and routes them to athletes through NIL deals: appearances, social posts, autograph sessions, charity work. Collectives still drive the majority of NIL dollars, far outspending direct commercial brand deals.
Two original structures
Early collectives formed in two flavors:
- For-profit — straightforward commercial entities that pay athletes for marketing services.
- Nonprofit 501(c)(3) — structured so donors could deduct contributions, pairing athlete pay with charitable activities.
The nonprofit model was attractive precisely because the tax deduction made giving cheaper for donors, which raised more money.
2. The IRS Ruling That Changed Everything
AM 2023-004 in plain terms
The IRS Chief Counsel memo concluded that most nonprofit NIL collectives do not qualify for 501(c)(3) status. The logic: paying athletes for their NIL is the very justification for the collective's existence, so the private benefit to athletes is not incidental — it is the primary purpose.
A charity cannot exist primarily to enrich private individuals.
Why the deduction mattered so much
When donations stopped being tax-deductible, the math for donors changed overnight. A gift that cost a top-bracket donor far less after the deduction now costs full price. Some collective founders stepped away because they were not comfortable soliciting contributions they could no longer promise were deductible.
3. Where the Money Went Instead
Migration to for-profit and revenue sharing
With the nonprofit model broken, money migrated. Many collectives converted to for-profit entities, dropping the charitable framing and operating as straightforward marketing companies. Simultaneously, the House settlement gave schools a revenue-sharing pool to pay athletes directly, pulling some funding out of collectives entirely.
The funnel reprices
This is the core dynamic: the money did not disappear, it rerouted. Donors who gave for the deduction recalibrated; schools picked up direct payment; for-profit collectives absorbed the rest. The same total demand to pay athletes found new, compliant channels — a textbook example of a funnel repricing around a regulatory change rather than shrinking.
4. The RevOps Lessons
A tax or pricing change reprices behavior
The single biggest lesson is that incentives drive flows. The deduction was an incentive; remove it and donor behavior shifts immediately. RevOps teams see the same thing when a pricing change, a discount-policy change, or a comp-plan change alters how deals are structured. Model the behavior change, not just the headline rule.
Follow the money to its new channel
When one funding channel closes, demand reroutes rather than vanishing. Operators who track where revenue migrates — from collectives to revenue sharing to for-profit entities — keep their forecast accurate, while those who assume the old channel's decline equals total decline get the number wrong.
Build for compliance reality, not the loophole
Collectives that built their model on a fragile tax interpretation had to rebuild when the IRS closed it. RevOps and finance teams should design revenue and incentive structures on durable ground, because a model that depends on a favorable regulatory reading is one memo away from collapse.
Watch the enforcement lag
One subtlety: the IRS memo is a Chief Counsel opinion, not a blanket revocation, so change has come gradually rather than overnight — some collectives kept operating as nonprofits while the enforcement caught up. Operators should read that lag correctly. A regulator signaling a position is a warning to restructure early, not permission to assume nothing will happen.
The teams that moved to for-profit status ahead of enforcement avoided a scramble; the ones that waited for a formal revocation took on avoidable risk. The same discipline applies to any business sitting on a tax or pricing treatment a regulator has publicly questioned — restructure on the signal, not on the final ruling.
FAQ
What is an NIL collective? A booster- and donor-funded organization, usually separate from the university, that pools money and pays a school's athletes for NIL activities like appearances, social posts, and autographs. Collectives drive the majority of NIL spending.
Why did the IRS say NIL collectives are not tax-exempt? In memo AM 2023-004, the IRS Chief Counsel held that paying athletes for their NIL is a substantial nonexempt purpose — the collective exists primarily to benefit athletes' private interests, not a charitable cause, which disqualifies most from 501(c)(3) status.
What happened to nonprofit NIL collectives? Without tax-deductible donations, the nonprofit model became untenable. Many converted to for-profit structures or dissolved, and some founders stepped away because they could no longer promise donors a deduction.
Where does NIL money flow now? It rerouted rather than disappeared — into for-profit collectives and, increasingly, the House settlement's direct revenue-sharing pool that lets schools pay athletes themselves.
What is the operator takeaway? A single tax or pricing change reprices behavior. When an incentive like a deduction is removed, the money finds new channels. Model the behavior change, follow the migration, and build on durable compliance rather than a fragile loophole.
Bottom Line
NIL collectives pool booster money to pay athletes, and their tax foundation shifted under them: the IRS memo AM 2023-004 disqualified most from 501(c)(3) status, ruling that paying athletes is a substantial nonexempt purpose. With the deduction gone, the nonprofit model collapsed — collectives converted to for-profit or dissolved, and the House settlement's revenue sharing absorbed more of the funding.
For operators, it is a vivid case of a funnel repricing around regulation: incentives drive flows, demand reroutes rather than vanishing, and durable models beat fragile loopholes.
Sources
- Wolters Kluwer — IRS memorandum calls tax-exempt status of NIL collectives into question
- Alston & Bird — The IRS's latest play on NIL collectives
- Perlman & Perlman — The demise of nonprofit NIL collectives has arrived
- PBMares — Most NIL collectives ineligible for tax-exempt status
- JD Supra — IRS takes skeptical view of NIL collectives
*NIL collectives review — NIL collective reviews, rating, tax status review 2027, and a review of 501(c)(3) eligibility, IRS memo AM 2023-004, and collective funding migration for operators.*