How does NIL income taxation work for college athletes in 2027?
Published Jun 14, 2026 · Updated Jun 14, 2026
Direct Answer
College athletes owe federal income tax plus a 15.3% self-employment tax on their net NIL earnings, must make quarterly estimated payments because nothing is withheld, and may owe taxes in multiple states — making NIL income a real tax-compliance challenge, not free money. All NIL income is taxable whether or not a form arrives; in 2026 businesses paying $2,000 or more must file a 1099-NEC, but the athlete owes the tax regardless.
Because no employer withholds, athletes expecting to owe $1,000+ must pay quarterly estimated taxes (roughly April 15, June 16, September 15, and January) or face underpayment penalties even if they pay the full balance at filing. They owe tax to their state of residence plus possibly nonresident states where they performed work.
The offset: only net profit is taxed, so business deductions — mileage (67 cents/mile in 2026), marketing, and skill-related education — reduce the bill.
For operators, NIL taxation is a clean parallel to managing 1099 contractor income, multi-state tax nexus, and net-of-expenses accounting — the same finance-ops disciplines a business runs every day.
1. Self-Employment Tax and 1099s
The 15.3% surprise
The biggest shock for athletes is the 15.3% self-employment tax on top of federal income tax. NIL income is self-employment income, so the athlete pays both halves of Social Security and Medicare that an employer would normally split — a substantial bite many do not expect.
Taxable with or without a form
In 2026, payers issuing $2,000+ must file a 1099-NEC, but the athlete owes tax on all NIL income regardless of whether a form arrives. Relying on "no form, no tax" is a costly mistake — the obligation follows the income, not the paperwork.
2. Quarterly Estimated Payments
No withholding means self-management
Unlike a paycheck, NIL payments have no tax withheld. Athletes expecting to owe $1,000 or more must make quarterly estimated payments — roughly April 15, June 16, September 15, and January. The responsibility shifts entirely to the athlete.
The penalty trap
Skipping quarterly payments triggers underpayment penalties even if the full balance is paid by the filing deadline. The tax system expects payment as income is earned, not in one lump at year-end — a cash-flow discipline many first-time earners miss.
3. Multi-State Tax Exposure
Resident plus nonresident states
Athletes owe income tax to their state of residence on all NIL income, plus possibly nonresident state taxes in any other state where they performed work — an appearance, a shoot, a paid event. Each state with its own estimated-payment rules adds complexity, though some states have no income tax at all.
The nexus parallel
This is tax nexus in miniature: performing work in a state creates a tax obligation there. It is the same problem a business faces with sales-tax and income-tax nexus across states — the more places you operate, the more jurisdictions you owe, and tracking it is a real compliance burden.
4. Deductions: Tax Only the Net
Net profit, not gross
Self-employment tax applies only to net profit — gross income minus business expenses. So deductions directly lower the bill. Deductible items include vehicle/mileage (67 cents per mile in 2026), marketing and promotion costs, and education that maintains or improves skills required for the NIL business.
Why tracking expenses pays
Every legitimate business expense reduces both income tax and the 15.3% self-employment tax. An athlete who tracks mileage, equipment, and marketing can meaningfully shrink the taxable base — the same reason any business meticulously tracks deductible costs to report net, not gross.
5. The RevOps and Finance Lessons
Manage 1099 income like a business
The athlete's situation mirrors 1099 contractor management: income with no withholding, self-reported, taxed on net. The lesson for anyone handling contractor or self-employment income is to set aside taxes as income arrives, pay quarterly, and never assume a missing form means no obligation.
Treat the income like a small business from dollar one.
Track multi-state obligations early
Performing work across states creates multi-state tax exposure — the same nexus problem businesses manage. The discipline is to track where income is earned and owe accordingly, building the system before the obligations pile up rather than reconstructing it at filing time.
Report net, and document the deductions
Because tax applies to net profit, disciplined expense tracking directly lowers the bill. The finance lesson is universal: document deductible costs contemporaneously, report net rather than gross, and treat record-keeping as the cheapest tax strategy available.
FAQ
Do college athletes pay taxes on NIL income? Yes. They owe federal income tax plus a 15.3% self-employment tax on net NIL earnings, and possibly state taxes. All NIL income is taxable whether or not a 1099-NEC is issued.
When is a 1099 issued for NIL? In 2026, businesses paying $2,000 or more must file a 1099-NEC. But the athlete owes tax on all NIL income regardless of whether a form is sent.
Do athletes have to make quarterly tax payments? Yes, if they expect to owe $1,000 or more. Because nothing is withheld, they must make quarterly estimated payments (roughly April 15, June 16, September 15, and January) or face underpayment penalties.
Do athletes owe taxes in multiple states? Possibly. They owe tax to their state of residence on all NIL income, plus nonresident state taxes in any state where they performed paid work — a tax-nexus situation, though some states have no income tax.
What NIL expenses are deductible? Because only net profit is taxed, deductions like mileage (67 cents/mile in 2026), marketing, and skill-related education reduce the bill, lowering both income tax and the 15.3% self-employment tax.
Bottom Line
NIL income is taxed like a small business: federal income tax plus a 15.3% self-employment tax on net earnings, owed whether or not a 1099-NEC arrives, paid through quarterly estimates to avoid penalties, and potentially owed across multiple states. Deductions on net profit — mileage, marketing, education — soften the bill.
For operators, it is a clean parallel to managing 1099 contractor income, multi-state nexus, and net-of-expenses accounting: set aside taxes as income arrives, track where it is earned, and document every deductible cost.
Sources
- SDO CPA — NIL tax guide for college athletes: what you owe and how to plan
- Reed Corporation CPA Firm — NIL income taxes: a 2026 guide for college athletes
- Intuit TurboTax — A parent's guide to NIL: navigating your college athlete's taxes
- Albin, Randall and Bennett — NIL income and taxes: what athletes and families need to know
- Grigg Financial Group — Student-athlete NIL: special tax situations to consider
- Tax Policy Center — Do college athletes need their own tax-advantaged investment account?
*NIL tax review — NIL tax reviews, rating, college athlete tax review 2027, and a review of self-employment tax, 1099-NEC, quarterly estimates, and multi-state nexus for operators.*