NCAA Considers Bold Age-Based Eligibility Reform Amid Legal Challenges and SCORE Act Debates

April 8, 2026
NCAA Considers Bold Age-Based Eligibility Reform Amid Legal Challenges and SCORE Act Debates
  • The proposals have drawn attention amid discussions around the SCORE Act and related congressional action, including signals from the administration about executive action and potential legal challenges.

  • NCAA President Charlie Baker has called the executive order a significant step forward, though practical rollout remains to be seen.

  • Uncertainty remains over whether the rule would shield the NCAA from lawsuits, as the association seeks a limited antitrust exemption from Congress to address eligibility litigation.

  • The rule faces ongoing antitrust questions and potential challenges, given past lawsuits seeking extra eligibility on grounds like injuries.

  • A bold, age-based eligibility reform is being considered by the NCAA: five years of eligibility would begin at an athlete’s 19th birthday or high school graduation, with no redshirts or waivers under the new system.

  • The plan would allow five years of eligibility with limited exceptions, but would not grant extra eligibility for injuries, preserving a hard cap on playing time.

  • Exceptions would be very limited—primarily maternity leave, military service, or religious missions—while the core five-year clock would remain fixed.

  • Supporters argue the rule would simplify eligibility, eliminate gray areas, and reduce litigation risk caused by interpretation disputes.

  • Implementation could begin as early as the fall, with the Cabinet review imminent and a formal timeline still to be announced.

  • The shift aims to resolve ongoing lawsuits tied to the current waiver system, which saw about 1,450 waiver requests in the last academic year and multiple eligibility-denial lawsuits.

  • Framing the change as a response to a fractured eligibility landscape, the policy seeks to stabilize rosters amid rising transfer activity and compensation dynamics in college sports.

  • Debate continues about potential downsides, including the concern that extra eligibility could squeeze younger recruits, with several high-profile eligibility cases already in courts.

Summary based on 10 sources


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